2025 Session Last amended: 1990 session

§ 65B.51 — Deduction of Collateral Benefits From Tort Recovery; Limitation on Right to Recover Damages

Plain-Language Summary

This section governs when accident victims can bring tort (negligence) lawsuits and what they can recover. It requires courts to deduct no-fault benefits from tort recoveries to prevent double recovery, and it restricts claims for pain and suffering (noneconomic damages) to cases meeting a specific injury threshold.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When an auto accident victim considers filing a negligence lawsuit against the at-fault driver. Who this affects: Accident victims, at-fault drivers, and their insurers. Key points: No-fault benefits already paid or payable are deducted from any tort recovery to prevent double compensation. To recover noneconomic damages (pain and suffering), the victim must meet one of these thresholds: (a) medical expenses exceeding $4,000, or (b) permanent injury, permanent disfigurement, or disability lasting 60 or more days. A victim can always sue for economic losses not covered by no-fault benefits, such as losses exceeding the $20,000 medical cap or the $250/week income loss cap. The comparative fault deduction under section 604.01 is applied after the no-fault benefit deduction.