This is legal information, not legal advice. Statutes of limitations involve precise accrual dates, tolling events, and recent legislative changes. If you are considering whether to file a claim or whether charges against you are time-barred, consult a licensed Nevada attorney before relying on any information here.
What Is a Statute of Limitations?
A statute of limitations is a law that sets the maximum period of time within which a legal action must be commenced after a cause of action arises. Once the applicable time limit passes, the right to bring that claim or prosecution is extinguished — and in Nevada, the opposing party can raise that expiration as an affirmative defense to defeat the action.
Criminal Statutes of Limitations
In criminal law, the SOL sets the time within which a prosecutor must file an indictment, information, or complaint. If charges are not filed within the applicable period, the accused generally cannot be prosecuted for that offense — even if they are clearly guilty and new evidence later emerges. Criminal SOLs are governed by ↗ NRS Chapter 171.
Civil Statutes of Limitations
In civil law, the SOL sets the time within which a plaintiff must file a lawsuit. A claim filed after the SOL has expired is subject to dismissal. Civil SOLs serve public interests in finality and protecting defendants from having to defend against stale claims. The primary civil SOL statute is ↗ NRS Chapter 11.
The policy behind SOLs is practical: as time passes, witnesses’ memories fade, physical evidence deteriorates, and records are lost. SOLs encourage parties to bring claims promptly while the evidence needed to resolve them fairly is still available. However, Nevada law also recognizes that some wrongs are so serious — or so effectively hidden — that no time limit should apply.
Civil and Criminal SOLs Are Separate Systems
This distinction is critical and widely misunderstood. The civil and criminal statutes of limitations in Nevada operate completely independently of each other. The expiration of one has no effect on the other.
- A civil SOL can expire while the criminal SOL has not. For example, the 2-year civil personal injury SOL for a battery can run out while the 3-year criminal felony SOL is still open. The victim may lose the right to sue but the prosecutor may still be able to charge.
- A criminal SOL can expire while a civil claim remains viable. The criminal 3-year felony clock may have run, but the civil fraud claim’s discovery-based 3-year window may still be open if the victim discovered the fraud more recently.
- An acquittal or dismissal of criminal charges does not bar a civil lawsuit, and a civil judgment against a defendant does not preclude or require a criminal prosecution.
Understanding which system applies to your situation — or whether both do — is the first step in any SOL analysis.
Criminal SOLs: The Complete Chart
The following chart reflects the criminal statutes of limitations as established by NRS Chapter 171, revised June 29, 2024. Unless an extension or exception applies (see Sections 4 and 9), charges must be filed within these windows from the date the offense was committed.
Murder; sexual assault arising out of the same facts and circumstances as a murder; terrorism (NRS 202.445); sexual assault if DNA evidence identifies the accused (NRS 171.082); sexual assault or sex trafficking if victim files a written police report within the applicable SOL period (NRS 171.083).
Sexual abuse of a child (NRS 432B.100) or sex trafficking of a child: until victim turns 36 if the victim discovers (or should have discovered) the abuse before age 36; until victim turns 43 if the victim did not and should not have discovered it by age 36. ↗ NRS 171.095(1)(b)
Sexual assault (rape) of an adult victim (NRS 200.366). No limitation at all if a police report is filed within 20 years or if DNA evidence identifies the accused. ↗ NRS 171.085(2)
Attempted murder and kidnapping: if the victim files a written police report within 3 years of the offense, the SOL is extended to 8 years total from the date of commission. If no police report is filed within 3 years, the standard 3-year felony SOL applies. ↗ NRS 171.084
Sex trafficking of an adult victim (NRS 201.300). No limitation if victim files a police report within 6 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(3)
Theft / grand larceny (NRS 205.220), robbery (NRS 200.380), burglary (NRS 205.060), forgery (NRS 205.090), arson (NRS 205.010), securities fraud (NRS 90.570), 3rd-or-successive deceptive trade practice (NRS 598.0999), and multiple-transaction fraud (NRS 205.377). ↗ NRS 171.085(1)
All other felonies not specifically listed above (the residual felony category). This includes most drug offenses, assault with a deadly weapon, child abuse, DUI felony, reckless driving felony, and similar offenses. ↗ NRS 171.085(4)
Gross misdemeanors (including second-offense DUI, indecent exposure, open/gross lewdness, and many domestic violence misdemeanors charged at the gross misdemeanor level). ↗ NRS 171.090(1)
Standard misdemeanors (including petit larceny, simple battery, DUI first offense, trespass, solicitation of prostitution, breach of peace, and similar offenses). ↗ NRS 171.090(2)
Common Crimes at a Glance
No limitation. ↗ NRS 171.080
20 years; no limitation with DNA match or police report filed within 20 years. Child victim: age 36 or 43 rule. ↗ NRS 171.085(2), ↗ NRS 171.082
4 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(1)
4 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(1)
4 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(1)
4 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(1)
8 years if police report filed within 3 years; otherwise 3 years. ↗ NRS 171.084
8 years if police report filed within 3 years; otherwise 3 years. ↗ NRS 171.084
3 years (felony). ↗ NRS 171.085(4)
3 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(4)
3 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(4)
3 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(4)
1 year. ↗ NRS 171.090(2)
3 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(4)
1 year (misdemeanor); 2 years (gross misdemeanor); 3 years (felony). ↗ NRS 171.085, ↗ NRS 171.090
4 years. ↗ NRS 171.085(1)
1 year (misdemeanor). ↗ NRS 171.090(2)
Criminal SOL Statutes Verbatim (NRS Ch. 171)
The following are the key criminal limitation statutes, quoted verbatim from NRS Chapter 171 (Rev. 6/29/2024):
“1. [A prosecution for] [m]urder, or a sexual assault arising out of the same facts and circumstances as a murder, must be commenced. It may be commenced at any time after the death of the person killed.
2. A violation of NRS 202.445 [terrorism] must be commenced. It may be commenced at any time after the violation is committed.”
“1. If the identity of a person who is accused of committing a sexual assault is established by conducting a genetic marker analysis of a biological specimen and obtaining a DNA profile, the period of limitation prescribed in NRS 171.085 is removed and there is no limitation of the time within which a prosecution for the sexual assault must be commenced.”
“1. Except as otherwise provided in NRS 171.080, if, at any time during the period of limitation prescribed in NRS 171.085 and 171.095, a victim of a sexual assault, a person authorized to act on behalf of a victim of a sexual assault, or a victim of sex trafficking or a person authorized to act on behalf of a victim of sex trafficking, files with a law enforcement officer a written report concerning the sexual assault or sex trafficking, the period of limitation prescribed in NRS 171.085 and 171.095 is removed and there is no limitation of the time within which a prosecution for the sexual assault or sex trafficking must be commenced.”
“3. If a victim of a sexual assault or sex trafficking is under a disability during any part of the period of limitation prescribed in NRS 171.085 and 171.095 and a written report concerning the sexual assault or sex trafficking is not otherwise filed pursuant to subsection 1, the period during which the victim is under the disability must be excluded from any calculation of the period of limitation…
4. For the purposes of this section, a victim of a sexual assault or sex trafficking is under a disability if the victim is insane, intellectually disabled, mentally incompetent or in a medically comatose or vegetative state.”
“1. If, at any time during the period of limitation prescribed in NRS 171.085 and 171.095, a victim of kidnapping or attempted murder, or a person authorized to act on behalf of such a victim, files with a law enforcement officer a written report concerning the offense, the period of limitation prescribed in NRS 171.085 and 171.095 is extended for 5 years.”
Note: The base period for kidnapping and attempted murder is the 3-year felony period under NRS 171.085(4). A filed police report extends it by 5 additional years, for a total of 8 years.
“Except as otherwise provided in NRS 171.080 to 171.084, inclusive, and 171.095, an indictment for:
1. Theft, robbery, burglary, forgery, arson, a violation of NRS 90.570, a violation punishable pursuant to paragraphs (a) to (d), inclusive, of subsection 3 of NRS 598.0999 or a violation of NRS 205.377 must be found, or an information or complaint filed, within 4 years after the commission of the offense.
2. Sexual assault must be found, or an information or complaint filed, within 20 years after the commission of the offense.
3. Sex trafficking must be found, or an information or complaint filed, within 6 years after the commission of the offense.
4. Any felony other than the felonies listed in subsections 1, 2 and 3 must be found, or an information or complaint filed, within 3 years after the commission of the offense.”
“Except as otherwise provided in NRS 171.095, 202.885 and 624.800, an indictment for:
1. A gross misdemeanor must be found, or an information or complaint filed, within 2 years after the commission of the offense.
2. Any other misdemeanor must be found, or an information or complaint filed, within 1 year after the commission of the offense.”
“An indictment must be found, or an information or complaint filed, for any offense constituting sexual abuse of a child as defined in NRS 432B.100 or sex trafficking of a child as defined in NRS 201.300, before the victim is:
(1) Thirty-six years old if the victim discovers or reasonably should have discovered that he or she was a victim of the sexual abuse or sex trafficking by the date on which the victim reaches that age; or
(2) Forty-three years old if the victim does not discover and reasonably should not have discovered that he or she was a victim of the sexual abuse or sex trafficking by the date on which the victim reaches 36 years of age.”
Civil SOLs: NRS 11.190 (2024) — The Master Statute
↗ NRS 11.190 is the primary civil limitations statute for most non-real-property actions in Nevada. The 2024 version applies “except as otherwise provided in NRS 40.4639, 125B.050 and 217.007.” The following periods apply “unless further limited by specific statute.”
Many people assume all contracts in Nevada have a 6-year SOL. That is incorrect. Written contracts are 6 years under NRS 11.190(1)(b). Oral contracts (“contract, obligation or liability not founded upon an instrument in writing”) carry only a 4-year SOL under NRS 11.190(2)(c). This distinction has caught many plaintiffs by surprise.
(a) Actions upon a judgment or decree of a US or state/territory court, or the renewal thereof. (b) Actions upon a written contract, obligation, or liability founded upon an instrument in writing.
(a) Action on an open account for goods, wares, and merchandise sold and delivered. (b) Action for any article charged on an account in a store. (c) Oral contracts (“contract, obligation or liability not founded upon an instrument in writing”). (d) Deceptive trade practice (NRS 598.0903–598.0999) — from discovery. (e) Fraudulent reliance by a lender (NRS 40.750) — from discovery. (f) Fertility fraud (NRS 41.1335) — from discovery of the fraud or any resulting medical or genetic disorder, whichever is later.
(a) Action upon a liability created by statute (other than a penalty or forfeiture). (b) Waste or trespass upon real property (underground mining: from discovery). (c) Taking, detaining, or injuring personal property (including specific recovery; livestock with recorded brand: from actual knowledge of possession by defendant). (d) Fraud or mistake — from discovery. (e) Fraudulent conduct of a borrower causing damages to a financial institution (NRS 40.750) — from discovery. (f) Fertility fraud (NRS 41.1335) — from discovery.
(a) Action against a sheriff, coroner, or constable for liability incurred in official capacity. (b) Action upon a statute for penalty or forfeiture (unless the statute prescribes a different limit). (c) Libel, slander, assault, battery, false imprisonment, or seduction. (d) Action against a sheriff or officer for escape of a prisoner on civil process. (e) Personal injury (wrongful act/neglect) and wrongful death — except as otherwise provided in NRS 11.215 or 11.217 (sexual assault and sexual abuse exceptions). (f) Action under NRS 41.740.
(a) Action against a tax collector officer to recover seized goods or for damages from the seizure, detention, or sale of personal property seized in tax collection. (b) Action against such an officer for money paid under protest that ought to be refunded.
Special Civil SOLs Beyond NRS 11.190
NRS 11.190 is the general rule, but many causes of action are governed by separate, more specific statutes. These special statutes override the NRS 11.190 periods when they apply.
The SOL for medical malpractice in Nevada is a complex multi-trigger rule: you must file within 3 years from the date of injury or within 1 year from the date you discovered (or reasonably should have discovered) the injury, whichever is earlier. An absolute outer limit (“statute of repose”) of 4 years from the date of the act or omission applies — except for cases involving a foreign object left in the body (no 4-year bar on discovery) or fraudulent concealment by the provider. This means a patient who discovers their injury 3 years and 6 months after the act has lost their claim under both the 3-year and 4-year bars — even though they discovered it recently. ↗ NRS 41A.097
Nevada uses a two-tier system for construction defect claims. For patent (apparent) defects, the action must be commenced within 6 years after the substantial completion of the improvement to real property. For latent (hidden) defects — those not reasonably discoverable upon inspection — the outer limit is 10 years after substantial completion, functioning as a statute of repose. Separate notice requirements under NRS Chapter 40 (the “Right to Repair” law) apply before a construction defect lawsuit may be filed. ↗ NRS 11.202, ↗ NRS 11.204
NRS 11.190(4)(e) explicitly carves out sexual assault and sexual abuse cases from the standard 2-year personal injury SOL. Under ↗ NRS 11.215, adult victims of sexual assault have 20 years from the date of the assault to bring a civil claim. For victims who were minors at the time of the abuse, NRS 11.215 eliminates the standard limitation period — the victim may bring a civil action for childhood sexual abuse at any time. These expansions reflect Nevada’s recognition that sexual trauma survivors often require many years to come forward.
See Section 11 below for the full discussion of the government claims notice trap. In brief: you must file a written claim against the government within 2 years of the accrual of the cause of action — and then wait before filing suit. Failing to give notice within the window bars the lawsuit, even if the underlying civil SOL (e.g., the 2-year personal injury period) has not yet run. ↗ NRS 41.036
When Does the Clock Start? Accrual
“Accrual” is when the SOL clock begins. For most causes of action, the clock starts the moment the cause of action arises — usually when the harmful act occurs, the injury is sustained, or the contract is breached. But Nevada law recognizes several exceptions that delay accrual, and the correct accrual date is often the single most disputed question in SOL litigation.
Criminal Accrual
In criminal cases, the SOL generally begins running on the date the offense was committed. For ongoing crimes (such as continuing embezzlement or conspiracy), the clock may not start until the last act in furtherance of the offense. For “secret offenses,” the clock starts from the date of discovery (see Section 9).
Civil Accrual
In civil cases, accrual typically occurs when the plaintiff first suffers injury. In personal injury cases, that is usually the date of the accident. In contract cases, it is the date of breach. In fraud cases, accrual is deferred to the date of discovery under the discovery rule (Section 8). In medical malpractice, the accrual question — especially distinguishing the date of the act from the date of the injury — can be highly contested.
Two parties can agree on the SOL period but hotly dispute when it started running. A defendant argues the clock started earlier; a plaintiff argues it started later. Accrual disputes are litigated frequently in Nevada courts, particularly in medical malpractice, fraud, and discovery-rule cases. Do not assume the clock started when you first became aware of your injury — in some cases, Nevada courts may find that a reasonably diligent person should have discovered the cause of action earlier, triggering the discovery rule clock before the plaintiff actually discovered anything.
The Discovery Rule
For certain civil claims, Nevada defers the start of the SOL clock until the plaintiff discovers — or reasonably should have discovered — the facts giving rise to the claim. This is known as the discovery rule, and it prevents defendants from escaping liability by effectively hiding their wrongdoing until the SOL expires.
Civil causes of action with a statutory discovery rule accrual under NRS 11.190 include:
- Fraud or mistake: 3 years from discovery of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake (NRS 11.190(3)(d))
- Deceptive trade practice: 4 years from when the aggrieved party discovers, or by due diligence should have discovered, the facts (NRS 11.190(2)(d))
- Lender fraud by borrower (NRS 40.750): 3 years from discovery (NRS 11.190(3)(e))
- Fertility fraud (NRS 41.1335): 4 years from discovery of the fraud or of any resulting medical or genetic disorder, whichever is later (NRS 11.190(3)(f))
- Underground mining waste or trespass: 3 years from discovery of the facts constituting the waste or trespass (NRS 11.190(3)(b))
- Medical malpractice: 1 year from discovery, with a 3-year maximum from the act (NRS 41A.097)
The discovery rule does not simply ask when the plaintiff actually learned of the claim. It asks when a reasonable person exercising ordinary diligence would have discovered the facts. If a reasonable person would have investigated and found the fraud earlier, the clock starts at that earlier date — even if the plaintiff was not paying attention. This objective standard is often used by defendants to argue that the SOL began running before the plaintiff acknowledges becoming aware of the problem.
Secret Offenses: The Criminal Discovery Rule
Nevada’s criminal SOL also has a discovery-based exception for offenses committed in a “secret manner.” Under ↗ NRS 171.095(1)(a), if a felony, gross misdemeanor, or misdemeanor is committed in a secret manner, the applicable SOL period does not begin running until after the offense is discovered:
“If a felony, gross misdemeanor or misdemeanor is committed in a secret manner, an indictment for the offense must be found, or an information or complaint filed, within the periods of limitation prescribed in NRS 171.085, 171.090 and 624.800 after the discovery of the offense.”
Nevada courts have defined a “secret” offense as one “committed in a deliberately surreptitious manner that is intended to and does keep all but those committing the crime unaware that an offense has been committed.” Walstrom v. State (1988) 104 Nev. 51.
This exception is particularly significant in:
- Embezzlement and employee theft: Often conducted secretly over months or years. The clock does not start until the employer or victim discovers the missing funds.
- Identity theft and fraud: Victims frequently do not learn of the crime for years. The SOL is tolled until discovery.
- Forgery: Forged documents may go undetected for years. Discovery triggers the clock.
- Sexual abuse of children: Beyond the secret offense provision, child victims have the age-36/43 rule under NRS 171.095(1)(b) (Section 4 above).
Tolling: When the Clock Pauses
Tolling means the SOL clock is temporarily paused, suspending the countdown without resetting it. When the tolling event ends, the clock resumes from where it left off. Nevada law provides several statutory tolling rules:
Under NRS 171.095 and related provisions, the SOL is tolled during any period the defendant is not a resident of Nevada or is not usually present in the state. If a defendant commits an offense in Nevada and immediately leaves for another state, the criminal clock may not begin running — or may pause — until the defendant returns or is subject to Nevada jurisdiction.
When a civil SOL begins running, it is tolled if the person entitled to bring the action is, at the time of accrual: (1) a minor (under 18); or (2) insane or mentally incompetent. The tolling continues for the duration of the disability. After the disability is removed, the person has the remaining SOL period to file. However, the outer limits imposed by statutes of repose (such as the 4-year cap in medical malpractice) may still apply. ↗ NRS 11.250
Under NRS 171.083(3)–(4), if a victim of sexual assault or sex trafficking is insane, intellectually disabled, mentally incompetent, or in a medically comatose or vegetative state during any part of the applicable SOL, that period is excluded from the SOL calculation. The clock does not run while the victim cannot function to report the offense.
Under NRS 171.095(2), if an indictment or complaint is filed within the SOL period but is defective so that no judgment can be given on it, a new prosecution may be commenced for the same offense within 6 months after the first prosecution is abandoned. This provides a brief extension when a technical defect in the charging document would otherwise allow the defendant to escape on SOL grounds.
Nevada courts recognize equitable tolling based on fraudulent concealment: if a defendant actively conceals facts that would have put the plaintiff on notice of the claim, the SOL is tolled during the period of concealment. This is distinct from the statutory discovery rule — it requires affirmative concealment by the defendant, not merely the plaintiff’s failure to investigate.
Once a valid indictment is returned or a complaint is filed within the SOL period, the statute of limitations is satisfied for criminal purposes — even if the case takes years to reach trial, or even if the defendant is not arrested until long afterward. An outstanding arrest warrant does not expire simply because several years pass. The SOL only governs when charges must be filed, not when the defendant must be arrested or tried.
The Government Claims Notice Trap
This is one of the most consequential and frequently missed aspects of Nevada civil litigation. If you are injured due to the negligence of a state or local government entity or its employees, you cannot simply file a lawsuit. Nevada’s Tort Claims Act — specifically ↗ NRS 41.036 — requires you to file a written notice of claim with the appropriate government body before you can sue.
The Two-Step Requirement
Under NRS 41.036, a claimant must file a written claim against the state or local government within 2 years of the accrual of the cause of action. This is presented to the appropriate government body — the Nevada State Board of Examiners for claims against the State, or the appropriate local authority for local government claims. The notice must identify the claimant, the circumstances of the claim, the nature of the loss, and the damages sought.
After filing the notice, you must allow the government a period to respond. If the claim is rejected, you may then file suit. If the government does not respond, you must wait a minimum period before filing. Filing a lawsuit before submitting the required notice — or before the required waiting period expires — can result in dismissal of the entire case, even if the civil SOL has not yet run.
The personal injury SOL is 2 years under NRS 11.190(4)(e). The government notice requirement is also 2 years under NRS 41.036. They run on the same clock — but the notice filing must happen first, with time left over to actually file the lawsuit after the mandatory waiting period. If you wait until month 23 to file the notice, the 2-year SOL may expire before the waiting period ends and before you can file suit. Plaintiffs with valid government tort claims have lost cases entirely because they filed the notice too late to also file the lawsuit within the SOL. If your injury involves a government employee, vehicle, agency, school, or premises, consult an attorney immediately.
SOL as Affirmative Defense: Must Be Raised or It Is Waived
In Nevada criminal proceedings, the expiration of the statute of limitations is not a jurisdictional bar — it is an affirmative defense that the defendant must raise. The Nevada Supreme Court held in Hubbard v. State (1996) 112 Nev. 946 that the failure to raise the SOL defense in the trial court waives it: a defendant convicted at trial cannot later appeal on the ground that the SOL had expired if the defense was never raised below.
If you are charged with a crime and you believe the statute of limitations has expired, you must raise the SOL as a defense. Defense counsel should identify the issue before or at arraignment and, if necessary, file a motion to dismiss on SOL grounds. If you fail to raise it — even if the SOL had clearly expired — and you are convicted, the conviction may stand. As the Nevada Supreme Court confirmed in State v. Desavio (May 22, 2025), the consequences of failing to timely raise this defense are severe.
In civil cases, the statute of limitations is similarly an affirmative defense that the defendant must plead in their answer. If a defendant fails to raise the SOL defense in a timely manner under the Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure, the defense may be waived. However, because the civil rules require affirmative defenses to be pled in the answer, SOL defenses are routinely raised early in civil litigation.
Official Sources & Statutory References
All statutory text in this article is drawn from official Nevada government sources. NRS Chapters 11 and 171 were last revised June 29, 2024 (2023 session legislation). All primary links go to official government sources.
- NRS 11.190 — Periods of Limitation (Civil Actions — Master Statute) — Nevada Legislature (Rev. 6/29/2024); also available at Justia (2024)
- NRS 11.202 — Construction Defect: Patent/Apparent Defects (6-Year) — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 11.204 — Construction Defect: Latent/Hidden Defects (10-Year Repose) — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 11.215 — Civil Claims for Sexual Assault (20-Year; No Limit for Child Victims) — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 11.250 — Tolling for Minors and Persons Under Disability — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 41A.097 — Medical Malpractice: SOL (3-Year / 1-Year Discovery / 4-Year Repose) — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 41.036 — Notice of Claim Requirement (Government Tort Claims) — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 171.080 — No Limitation for Murder and Terrorism — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 171.082 — DNA Exception: No SOL for Sexual Assault — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 171.083 — Police Report Exception: No SOL for Sexual Assault or Sex Trafficking — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 171.084 — Kidnapping and Attempted Murder: 8-Year SOL on Police Report — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 171.085 — Felony SOLs (4-Year, 20-Year, 6-Year, 3-Year) — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 171.090 — Gross Misdemeanor (2 Years) and Misdemeanor (1 Year) SOLs — Nevada Legislature
- NRS 171.095 — Secret Offenses; Child Sex Abuse Age-36/43 Rule — Nevada Legislature
- NRS Chapter 11 — Limitation of Actions (Full Text) — Nevada Legislature (Rev. 6/29/2024)
- NRS Chapter 171 — Criminal Proceedings: Limitations (Full Text) — Nevada Legislature (Rev. 6/29/2024)