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Home DUI and DWI

Wrongful Death Claims After DUI Crashes: Family Guide

Madison by Madison
April 17, 2026
in DUI and DWI
Reading Time: 6 mins read
Wrongful Death Claims After DUI Crashes
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Losing someone in a drunk driving crash hits hard. The grief is heavy. The anger is real. At the same time, you face sudden costs, police reports, and insurance calls. You should not have to guess about your rights. This blog explains what wrongful death claims are, who can file, and what money you might recover after a DUI crash. It also explains how fault is proven when a driver chose to drink and drive. You will see why quick action protects your family and how a wrongful death claim can bring some measure of justice. If your crash happened in Georgia, a car crash lawyer in Atlanta GA can guide you through each step. You do not need legal training. You only need clear facts, plain language, and steady help during a hard time.

Content Hints

  • What a wrongful death claim is
  • How a wrongful death claim differs from criminal charges
  • Who can file a wrongful death claim
  • What you can recover after a DUI death
  • How fault is proven in DUI wrongful death claims
  • Why time limits matter
  • Steps your family can take now

What a wrongful death claim is

A wrongful death claim is a civil case. It seeks money from the person or business that caused a death. In a DUI crash, the claim often targets the drunk driver. It can also target a bar or store that sold alcohol in a reckless way, depending on state law.

The goal is simple. It is to replace the value of the life that was lost also it does not bring your loved one back. It does hold the wrongdoer to account in a way that reaches money, not jail.

How a wrongful death claim differs from criminal charges

A DUI crash can lead to two paths. One is criminal. The other is civil.

QuestionCriminal DUI caseWrongful death claim
Who brings the caseState prosecutorFamily or estate representative
Main goalPunish crimeRecover money for losses
OutcomeJail, fines, probationSettlement or court judgment
Standard of proofBeyond a reasonable doubtMore likely than not
Who controls decisionsProsecutorFamily and their lawyer

You can pursue a wrongful death claim even if the driver is not convicted. You can also pursue it while the criminal case is open. The two move on separate tracks.

Who can file a wrongful death claim

Each state sets its own rules. In many states, the following people can file.

  • Spouse
  • Children
  • Parents if there is no spouse or child

Sometimes the court appoints a personal representative. That person files on behalf of the estate and the family. The order matters. If you are unsure about your place in that line, you should ask early. Delay causes conflict and stress inside the family.

You can read basic state differences in wrongful death laws through public legal guides from law schools such as the Cornell Legal Information Institute.

What you can recover after a DUI death

Money in a wrongful death claim covers three broad groups.

  • Economic harm
  • Impact on the family
  • Punitive damages in some cases

Economic harm usually includes medical bills before death, funeral and burial costs, and lost income your loved one would have earned. It can also include lost health insurance and retirement benefits.

Impact on the family covers loss of care, guidance, and support. It can include loss of companionship. Courts try to place a dollar figure on what a person meant to a family. That process feels cold. It still matters for your stability.

Punitive damages punish extremely reckless conduct. Driving drunk often fits that level. These damages are not tied to a bill or receipt. They are tied to how shocking the conduct was.

How fault is proven in DUI wrongful death claims

Fault in a DUI case often starts with police work. It does not end there. Strong claims usually rest on three types of proof.

  • Evidence from the crash scene
  • Evidence of alcohol use
  • Evidence of the impact on your family

Crash scene proof includes photos, skid marks, damage to both cars, and witness statements. It can also include data from the cars. That data can show speed and braking.

Evidence of alcohol use includes breath or blood test results, field tests, bar receipts, and video from the bar, store, or roadway. It can also include social media posts that show drinking before driving.

Evidence of impact includes medical records, work records, and simple stories from family and friends that show who your loved one was. These stories help courts see the human loss, not only numbers.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports that thousands die each year in alcohol impaired crashes and explains how impairment affects driving on its website at NHTSA Drunk Driving.

Why time limits matter

Every state has a deadline called a statute of limitations. Once that time ends, you usually lose the right to bring a wrongful death claim. In many states the limit is one to three years from the date of death.

Time also harms proof. Skid marks fade. Cameras record over old video. Witness memory weakens. Quick action protects your claim and your family’s options.

Steps your family can take now

You may feel numb. You still can take three simple steps.

  • Gather documents
  • Write what you remember
  • Reach out for legal guidance

Gather the crash report, medical records, funeral bills, and any letters from insurers. Keep them in one place. Then write down what you know about the crash, your loved one’s work history, and how life has changed since the crash.

Finally, talk with a lawyer who handles DUI wrongful death cases. You deserve clear answers. You also deserve space to grieve without fighting a system alone.

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Content Hints

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  • What a wrongful death claim is
  • How a wrongful death claim differs from criminal charges
  • Who can file a wrongful death claim
  • What you can recover after a DUI death
  • How fault is proven in DUI wrongful death claims
  • Why time limits matter
  • Steps your family can take now
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