A dog bite can leave you dealing with serious injuries, mounting medical bills, and a confusing legal process. Nevada doesn’t automatically hold dog owners liable — but that doesn’t mean you’re out of options. Under Nevada’s dog bite laws, you can pursue compensation through negligence claims even if the dog has never bitten anyone before.
You have two years to file. Here’s what you need to know.
Nevada follows the “one bite rule,” meaning dog owners aren’t automatically liable for a first bite. But that doesn’t give them a free pass. If the owner failed to leash their dog, ignored signs of aggression, or violated Clark County’s animal control ordinances, they can be held liable through negligence, or negligence per se if they broke a local law.
Once a dog has bitten someone, it can be classified as “dangerous” or “vicious” under NRS 202.500. Keeping a known vicious dog is a misdemeanor, and if that dog causes substantial bodily harm, the owner faces a category D felony — up to 4 years in prison and $5,000 in fines.
The steps you take immediately affect both your health and the strength of your case.
Seek medical care right away. Dog bites carry real infection risks. The CDC estimates roughly 4.5 million dog bites happen annually in the U.S. — and about one in five require medical attention. Keep every medical record and receipt.
Identify the dog and its owner. Get their name, contact info, insurance details, and the dog’s vaccination history. Collect witness contact information if anyone saw the attack.
Report it. Clark County requires all dog bites to be reported to Animal Protection Services at (702) 455-7710. The dog will be placed under a 10-day quarantine to monitor for rabies.
Document everything. Photograph your injuries, the location, and the dog. If it got through a broken fence or was off-leash, photograph that too.
Don’t give recorded statements to the dog owner’s insurance company without talking to an attorney first. What you say — including what you post on social media — can be used to reduce or deny your claim.
Nevada law allows dog bite victims to recover damages for the full impact of their injuries, including:
The Insurance Information Institute reports that insurers paid $1.57 billion in dog bite claims in 2024, with the average claim reaching $69,272. Most homeowner’s insurance policies cover dog bite liability up to $100,000–$300,000.
One catch: Nevada’s modified comparative negligence rule (NRS 41.141) reduces your compensation by your percentage of fault. If you’re found more than 50% responsible — for example, if you provoked the dog — you recover nothing.
Under NRS 11.190, the statute of limitations for personal injury claims in Nevada is two years from the date of the bite. Miss that deadline, and the court will dismiss your case.
For children, the clock typically pauses until age 18 — but waiting still weakens a case. Evidence disappears, witnesses forget, and insurance situations change.
Recovering from a dog bite is hard enough without trying to navigate insurance companies and Nevada’s liability rules on your own. An experienced dog bite attorney handles the investigation, identifies liable parties, and fights for the compensation you deserve.
Attorney Meesha Moulton — recognized as a Top 100 Civil Plaintiff Lawyer by the National Trial Lawyers — helps dog bite victims across Las Vegas and Clark County every day.
Contact Meesha Moulton Law for a free consultation. No upfront costs. You pay nothing unless your case results in compensation.
If you are a dog bite victim in Nevada, our trusted personal injury attorneys can help. Contact the Law Offices of Meesha Moulton for a free consultation to share your experience and work together to understand your legal options after experiencing a dog bite claim. We can help you recover compensation for your medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering.
There are things you should and shouldn’t do right after a dog bite accident. First and foremost, make sure you seek medical care right away. Be careful about what you say to the opposing party as they can use that against you to dispute liability. Be diligent with what you post on social media as the insurance companies can use those posts to challenge severity of injury.
According to the CDC, nearly 1 in 5 people who suffer a dog bite require medical attention. Dogs can attack at any time. The mental state of the dog can vary from scared, nervous, eating or just while they are enjoying playing with their owners when they attack. Responsible dog owners know to keep their pet on a leash, to avoid rough play, and to try and socialize their dog from an early age.
Medical records, photos of injuries, the animal control report, witness statements, and documentation of the dog's history. Evidence that the owner violated leash laws or knew the dog was aggressive is particularly valuable in Nevada.
Most policies cover dog bite liability with limits between $100,000 and $300,000. Nevada prohibits insurers from denying coverage based solely on breed. Some policies exclude dogs with a documented bite history.
Not automatically. Nevada's one-bite rule ties liability to whether the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous. But owners who violate leash laws or ignore warning signs can be held liable through negligence — even for a first bite.
It varies. Straightforward cases with clear liability may settle in a few months. Cases involving serious injuries, disputed liability, or litigation can take a year or longer.
Usually, the dog owner's homeowner's or renter's insurance. If they're uninsured or the claim exceeds policy limits, the owner is personally responsible. Landlords, pet sitters, or kennels may also share liability.
Clark County quarantines the dog for 10 days after a bite to monitor for rabies, regardless of vaccination status. If symptoms appear during quarantine, further testing is conducted.
Yes. Nevada law allows victims to recover medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, scarring costs, and sometimes punitive damages — through insurance or a lawsuit filed within two years.