Loss of Consortium: What It Is, Who Can Claim It, and What It’s Worth
A loss of consortium claim is a legal claim that compensates a spouse or qualifying partner for harm to their relationship when a loved one is seriously injured or killed.
This claim serves a distinct purpose: it is separate from the injured person’s case and belongs to the spouse or partner whose relationship has been affected.
It also matters financially. In serious injury and wrongful death cases, a properly developed loss of consortium claim can significantly increase total recovery.
What Is Loss of Consortium?
Consortium refers to the benefits of a close personal relationship—companionship, affection, comfort, care, assistance, and sexual relations.
Loss of consortium means the loss or reduction of those benefits due to another party’s negligence or wrongful act.
Definition: Loss of consortium is the measurable harm to a spouse or partner’s relationship caused by an injury to the other person.
This concept comes from common law. Historically, only husbands could bring these claims. Courts expanded the doctrine over time, and today most states—including California—recognize claims by either spouse, and in some cases registered domestic partners.
In practical terms, if your spouse suffers a permanent injury in a truck accident and can no longer participate in daily life the way they once did, you can pursue a loss of consortium claim for how that injury changed your relationship.
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Do You Have a Loss of Consortium Claim?
Many people do not realize they have a separate claim. A simple framework can help you evaluate your situation.
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Was your spouse or partner seriously injured due to someone else’s negligence?
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Were you legally married or in a recognized partnership at the time?
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Has your daily life together changed in measurable ways?
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Can you describe specific before-and-after differences in your relationship?
If the answer to these questions is yes, there is a strong possibility that a loss of consortium claim exists alongside the primary injury case.
What Does a Loss of Consortium Claim Cover?
A loss of consortium claim focuses on real, observable changes in a relationship. Courts do not compensate general grief alone—they look for specific losses tied to the injury.
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Companionship and shared life
This includes the loss of time spent together and shared activities.
Example: A couple that regularly went hiking or attended family events together can no longer do so because one spouse has limited mobility after a spinal injury. -
Affection and emotional support
This covers reduced emotional connection, comfort, and communication.
Example: A traumatic brain injury leads to personality changes, making the injured spouse withdrawn or unable to provide emotional support. -
Sexual relations
Most states, including California, recognize loss of sexual intimacy as a compensable harm.
Example: A severe back injury results in chronic pain that prevents physical intimacy. -
Household services and daily assistance
This includes tasks the injured person previously handled.
Example: A spouse who managed childcare, cooking, or finances can no longer perform those duties due to cognitive impairment. -
Parental involvement (state-dependent)
Some states allow children to claim loss of parental consortium.
Example: A parent who coached a child’s team can no longer participate after a disabling injury.
Each category must be supported by concrete before-and-after changes in daily life.
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Who Can File a Loss of Consortium Claim?
Eligibility depends on state law, and this is where many claims succeed or fail.
Spouses (Legally Married)
All 50 states recognize loss of consortium claims for spouses. The key requirement is that the marriage existed at the time of the injury, not when the claim is filed.
Registered Domestic Partners (California)
California extends these rights to registered domestic partners. Courts treat these relationships similarly to marriage for purposes of consortium claims under CACI No. 3920.
Children
Some states allow minor children to bring claims for loss of parental consortium when a parent is seriously injured.
California does not allow this in injury cases. Children may only recover in wrongful death claims.
Unmarried Partners
Most states do not recognize claims by unmarried partners, even in long-term relationships. Without a legally recognized relationship, recovery is typically barred.
Key point: Eligibility depends on your legal relationship at the time of injury—not your relationship when you file the claim.
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What Triggers a Loss of Consortium Claim?
A loss of consortium claim is derivative, meaning it depends entirely on the injured person’s underlying case.
If there is no valid personal injury or wrongful death claim, there is no consortium claim.
Common triggering events include:
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Car accidents and highway collisions (e.g., I-5, I-405, or Pacific Coast Highway crashes)
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Truck accidents involving commercial carriers
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Medical malpractice, including surgical errors or delayed diagnosis
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Workplace injuries, particularly those involving permanent disability
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Defective products that cause serious harm
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Wrongful death
A critical legal point in California: the consortium claim rises and falls with the underlying case. If the injured spouse is found partially at fault under California’s comparative fault system (established in Li v. Yellow Cab Co.), the consortium claim is reduced by the same percentage.
If the primary claim is dismissed or resolved unfavorably, the consortium claim is affected as well.
How Do You Prove a Loss of Consortium Claim?
Courts require specific proof. General statements like “our relationship changed” are not enough.
A claimant must establish four elements:
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A valid underlying injury caused by negligence
This is proven through the injured spouse’s personal injury case. -
A legally recognized relationship
The claimant must show they were married or in a qualifying relationship at the time of injury. -
Actual harm to the relationship
The claimant must describe specific, concrete changes in daily life. -
Causation
The harm must be directly tied to the injury—not to unrelated or pre-existing issues.
Evidence That Strengthens These Claims
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Testimony from the spouse describing changes in routines, communication, and shared responsibilities
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Medical records showing the severity and permanence of the injury
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Expert opinions linking the injury to functional or psychological limitations
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Observations from friends, family, or coworkers who saw changes in the relationship
In California, juries are guided by CACI No. 3920, which outlines how to evaluate loss of consortium damages. While juries have discretion, they are instructed to consider the nature and extent of the loss in the relationship.
Loss of Consortium vs. Related Claims — What’s the Difference?
| Claim | Who Files | What It Compensates |
|---|---|---|
| Loss of consortium | Spouse/partner | Relationship losses: companionship, affection, support |
| Loss of support | Dependents | Financial contributions the injured or deceased would have provided |
| Loss of services | Spouse or estate | Household or economic services |
| Wrongful death | Statutory survivors | Combined economic and non-economic losses after death |
The key distinction is straightforward.
Loss of support is economic. It involves income, benefits, and financial contributions that can be calculated.
Loss of consortium is non-economic. It focuses on the quality and function of the relationship itself.
Both claims can exist in the same case, especially in wrongful death litigation.
How Much Is a Loss of Consortium Claim Worth?
There is no formula.
Loss of consortium damages are non-economic, which means they are not tied to bills or receipts. Juries and insurers evaluate them based on the facts of the case.
What Drives Value
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Severity of the injury
Catastrophic injuries—such as spinal cord damage, severe burns, or traumatic brain injuries—tend to produce higher awards. -
Permanence
Long-term or lifelong impairments carry more weight than temporary injuries. -
Length and stability of the relationship
A long-term marriage with shared responsibilities is typically more persuasive than a short-term relationship. -
Age of the individuals involved
Younger couples often receive higher awards due to the longer expected duration of the loss. -
Specific, documented impact
Detailed evidence of how daily life changed is critical. Vague claims tend to be discounted. -
Insurance and litigation posture
Insurers often challenge consortium claims aggressively. Settlement values may differ from trial outcomes. -
State law limitations
Some states impose caps on non-economic damages. California generally does not cap these damages in standard personal injury cases, though exceptions exist in specific areas like medical malpractice.
Practical Insight
Insurers frequently undervalue consortium claims early in a case. These claims become more valuable when:
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The injury is permanent
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The impact on daily life is well documented
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The case is prepared for trial, not just settlement
General Range
Awards in serious cases can range from tens of thousands to several million dollars. The variation is wide because outcomes depend heavily on the facts, the evidence presented, and the jurisdiction.
What This Looks Like in a Real Case
Consider a typical scenario in Southern California.
A driver is injured in a high-speed truck accident on Interstate 5. The injuries include a traumatic brain injury and partial paralysis. Before the accident, the individual worked full-time, managed household finances, and participated actively in family life.
After the accident:
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They cannot return to work
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Their personality and communication style change
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They require daily assistance
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They can no longer participate in parenting or shared activities
The spouse now handles all household responsibilities and loses the emotional and practical support that existed before the injury.
In this situation, the spouse’s loss of consortium claim reflects those changes. It is not based on sympathy alone—it is based on documented, life-altering impacts to the relationship.
State-Specific Considerations
California
California law recognizes loss of consortium claims for spouses and registered domestic partners. Courts rely on CACI No. 3920 to guide juries.
Important limitations include:
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No recovery for children in parental injury cases
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Application of comparative fault, which can reduce damages
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Close linkage between the consortium claim and the underlying injury case
New York
New York recognizes spousal consortium claims. The claim belongs to the spouse, not the injured person.
General Principle
Each state defines:
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Who can bring the claim
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What damages are recoverable
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Whether damages are limited
These rules vary. Always verify jurisdiction-specific requirements through state law or a licensed attorney.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the legal definition of loss of consortium?
Loss of consortium is a claim for the loss of relationship benefits—such as companionship, affection, and support—caused by a serious injury to a spouse or partner.
Can children file a loss of consortium claim?
It depends on the state. Some states allow it. California does not allow children to bring these claims for parental injury, only for wrongful death.
Does loss of consortium require a lawful marriage?
In most cases, yes. Some states, including California, extend rights to registered domestic partners. Unmarried partners are generally not eligible.
Is loss of consortium taxable?
Damages related to physical injuries are often not taxable under federal law. However, tax treatment can vary. A qualified tax professional should review any settlement.
Can a loss of consortium claim be filed after a settlement?
Usually no. If the injured person settles and releases all claims, the consortium claim may also be barred. These claims must be asserted before settlement is finalized.
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