Arizona school injuries can lead to negligence claims against schools — but governmental immunity, notice requirements, and shorter deadlines apply for public schools.
Published May 9, 2026
## School injury claims in Arizona
Children injured at school can have legitimate negligence claims — but Arizona school-injury cases face unique obstacles: sovereign immunity for public schools, strict notice deadlines, governmental tort caps, and procedural hurdles.
## Common school injuries
- **Playground falls** — equipment defects, supervision
- **Sports injuries** — coaching, equipment, conditions
- **Bullying / fighting** — supervision, prevention
- **Bus accidents** — driver negligence, equipment
- **Field-trip injuries** — supervision, planning
- **Slip-and-falls** — wet floors, ice, debris
- **Sexual assault** — supervision, prior knowledge
- **Allergic reactions** — food, EpiPen access
- **Lab / shop accidents** — chemicals, equipment
- **Mental health** — bullying-related, suicide
- **Special-education injuries** — restraint, neglect
- **Vehicle injuries** — pickup / dropoff zones
## Public vs private schools
**Public schools = government entities:**
- Sovereign immunity applies
- ${s.name} Tort Claims Act / similar
- Notice requirements (often 6 months or less)
- Damage caps
- Specific procedures
- Limited theories of liability
**Private schools = private entities:**
- Standard tort law applies
- Standard statute of limitations
- Standard discovery + procedure
- Insurance typically pays
- Easier cases generally
## Sovereign immunity (public schools)
**${s.name} Tort Claims Act:**
- Limited waiver of immunity
- Specific exceptions enumerated
- Specific procedures required
- Notice requirements
- Damage caps (typically $100K-$1M)
**Common immunity exceptions (vary by state):**
- Negligent operation of vehicle
- Defective premises
- Negligent supervision (sometimes)
- Specifically listed activities
- Federal civil rights violations
**Discretionary function immunity:**
- Policy decisions immune
- Operational decisions actionable
- Distinction often disputed
## Notice requirements
**Public school cases require:**
- Written notice to school district
- Within tight deadline (often 6 months)
- Specific contents (date, location, injury, claim)
- Specific delivery method
- Failure = case dismissed
**${s.name} specific:**
- Specific notice statute
- Specific deadline
- Specific contents required
- Specific recipients
**MISS DEADLINE = LOSE CASE.**
## Theories of liability
**1. Negligent supervision:**
- School failed to supervise students
- Foreseeable injury
- Standard of reasonably prudent supervision
- Higher duty for younger students
- Higher duty for known risks
**2. Premises liability:**
- Defective conditions
- Inadequate maintenance
- Slip / fall hazards
- Equipment failures
- Inadequate inspection
**3. Negligent hiring / retention:**
- Hiring known abusers
- Failing to act on complaints
- Inadequate background checks
- Especially in sex-abuse cases
**4. Educational malpractice:**
- Generally NOT recognized
- Limited claim viability
- Specific exceptions for IDEA / 504 violations
**5. Civil rights violations:**
- Title IX (sex discrimination)
- IDEA (special education)
- 504 (disability)
- 1983 (constitutional violations)
- Federal court usually
**6. Bullying / harassment:**
- Failure to address known bullying
- ${s.name} anti-bullying statutes
- Tinker constitutional protections
- Title IX for sex-based harassment
## Title IX — sexual misconduct
**Federal law:**
- All federally-funded schools
- Sex-based discrimination + harassment
- Sexual assault by students / staff
- Required investigation procedures
- Damages + attorney's fees
- Davis v. Monroe — "deliberate indifference" standard
## Special education — IDEA
**For students with disabilities:**
- IEP / 504 plan violations
- Restraint / seclusion injuries
- Failure to provide accommodations
- Specific procedural protections
- Due process hearings
- IDEA-specific remedies
## Bus accidents
**Often easier cases:**
- Negligent operation generally not immune
- Auto liability insurance applies
- Standard PI principles
- Less procedural complexity
## Sports injuries
**Higher bar for coach / school liability:**
- "Inherent risks" of sports assumed
- Liability waivers often signed
- Concussion protocols
- Equipment defects (manufacturer liability)
- Coaching negligence
- Improper conditioning
- Failure to address injuries
- Heat illness
## Damages available
**Compensatory:**
- Medical expenses (past + future)
- Future lost earning capacity
- Pain & suffering
- Disfigurement / scarring
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Mental health treatment
- Loss of educational opportunity
**For minor plaintiffs:**
- Future earnings particularly important
- Long-term medical care
- Special education costs
- Trust requirements for settlements
**Public school caps:**
- ${s.name} damage caps apply
- Often $100K-$1M per claim
- Per incident or aggregate
- Sometimes inadequate for catastrophic injuries
## Critical evidence
**Preserve immediately:**
- Photos of scene + equipment
- Witness contact info (other students, teachers)
- Medical records
- School incident reports
- Surveillance video preservation request
- Communications with school
- Prior complaints + incidents
- Maintenance + inspection records
- Staff training records
- Daily logs / sign-in sheets
## Strategy considerations
**Public school cases:**
- Notice must be sent quickly
- Damage caps make economics difficult
- Consider federal civil rights claims
- Title IX often important
- Often settle for limited amounts
**Private school cases:**
- Standard PI process
- Insurance typically pays
- Often better recoveries
- More flexible procedures
## Statute of limitations
**Generally extended for minors:**
- ${s.name} usually tolls until majority
- Plus standard SOL period after
- BUT public school notice requirements DON'T toll
- Critical to act on notice quickly
## What you should do
If your child was injured at a Arizona school: document everything immediately, send notice to school district within 30 days (don't wait), and consult a personal-injury attorney with school-injury experience. Public school deadlines are unforgiving. Many Arizona attorneys offer free consultations and contingency fees.
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*This guide is general information about Arizona law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. School-injury cases involve unique procedures + deadlines. Talk to a licensed Arizona personal-injury attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.