Medical Malpractice Lawyers in New York

If you or a loved one was harmed by a medical error in New York, you may have a malpractice claim. You generally have 2.5 years to file (CPLR §214-a), and proving the case requires showing a provider departed from the accepted standard of care and that it caused real harm.

Last updated June 2026
Laurence P. Banville, New York personal injury attorney
Laurence P. Banville Managing Partner · NY & D.C. Bars
The bottom line: Medical malpractice means a healthcare provider departed from the accepted standard of care and caused you harm. In New York you typically have 2.5 years to file (CPLR §214-a), with special rules for foreign objects and continuous treatment.

What counts as medical malpractice in New York?

Not every bad outcome is malpractice. You must show the provider failed to meet the accepted standard of care and that failure caused your injury. Common examples include misdiagnosis, surgical errors, medication mistakes, and birth injuries.

The deadline (and its exceptions)

The general statute of limitations is 2.5 years from the malpractice (CPLR §214-a). The clock can run from the end of continuous treatment, and a separate discovery rule applies to retained foreign objects. Claims against public hospitals require an early Notice of Claim (GML §50-e).

What these cases are worth

Value depends on the severity and permanence of the harm, medical costs, lost earnings, and pain and suffering. No honest lawyer can promise a number up front — outcomes vary and prior results never guarantee a future one.

Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to file a medical malpractice case in New York?

Generally 2.5 years from the malpractice or the end of continuous treatment (CPLR §214-a). Foreign-object cases use a discovery rule, and claims against public hospitals require an early Notice of Claim.

Is a bad outcome always malpractice?

No. You must show the provider departed from the accepted standard of care and that it caused your injury. Many poor outcomes are not negligence.

Laurence P. Banville

Reviewed by Laurence P. Banville, Esq.

Managing Partner, Banville Law · New York & D.C. Bars

Laurence Banville is a New York personal injury attorney and the Managing Partner of Banville Law. Born in County Wexford, Ireland, he earned his law degree summa cum laude from University College Dublin and once defended insurance companies in product-liability litigation — experience he now uses for injured New Yorkers. He has been named to the Irish Legal 100 and the Irish Echo’s Top 40 Under 40, and is an AVVO Rated attorney.

NY Bar D.C. Bar Irish Legal 100 AVVO Rated AAJ Member

Read Laurence’s full bio →

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