Illinois burn injury cases involve catastrophic damages including reconstructive surgeries, lifetime scarring, infection complications, and psychological trauma.
Published May 8, 2026
## Burn injury claims in Illinois
Burns are among the most painful and traumatic injuries — often requiring multiple reconstructive surgeries, leaving permanent scars, and causing significant psychological harm.
## Burn classifications
**By depth:**
- **First degree** — superficial; redness only (sunburn)
- **Second degree** — partial thickness; blistering
- **Third degree** — full thickness; through dermis
- **Fourth degree** — through muscle / bone
**By cause:**
- **Thermal burns** — fire, scalding, hot surfaces
- **Chemical burns** — acids, alkalis, industrial chemicals
- **Electrical burns** — current passing through body
- **Radiation burns** — UV, X-ray, nuclear
- **Friction burns**
- **Cold burns / frostbite**
**By extent:**
- Total Body Surface Area (TBSA) percentage
- 10%+ TBSA significant; 30%+ TBSA life-threatening
## Common causes
**Vehicle:**
- Fuel-tank fires after crashes
- Defective fuel-system designs
- Battery fires (EVs, lithium)
- Air-bag chemical burns
**Workplace:**
- Industrial chemical exposure
- Welding accidents
- Restaurant grease fires
- Electrical equipment
- Boiler / steam burns
**Premises:**
- Hotel scalding (water-temp regulation)
- Apartment fires (faulty wiring, smoke detectors)
- Commercial fires
- Pool / spa overheating
**Product defects:**
- Coffee makers / appliances
- Hair products / hot tools
- Cigarette lighters
- E-cigarettes / vaping batteries
- Defective heating pads
**Other:**
- Gas explosions
- Restaurant accidents
- Hot liquid spills (children most vulnerable)
- Medical devices
## Damages typically pursued
**Medical:**
- Initial emergency / ICU care
- Burn unit specialized care
- Skin grafts (often multiple)
- Reconstructive surgery (years of operations)
- Wound care
- Pain management
- Physical therapy
- Mental health (PTSD, depression)
- Future medical expenses
**Other:**
- Lost wages
- Lost earning capacity
- Pain and suffering (often substantial)
- Permanent disfigurement / scarring
- Loss of enjoyment
- Mental anguish
- Loss of consortium
- Wrongful death (in fatal cases)
## Lifetime costs
Severe burns commonly require:
- $750K-$2M+ for hospitalization
- $50K-$500K+ ongoing reconstructive surgeries
- $100K-$300K+ for psychological care
- Significant ongoing wound + scar management
- Functional rehabilitation
- Vocational training / disability
## Critical experts
- **Burn surgeons / plastic surgeons** — diagnosis + future care
- **Reconstructive specialists**
- **Pain management specialists**
- **Mental-health professionals** (PTSD common after burns)
- **Life care planners**
- **Vocational experts**
- **Fire investigators / fire marshals**
- **Engineering experts** for product / vehicle defect cases
- **Burn-cause experts** — accelerants, electrical analysis
## Liability theories
**Negligence:**
- Negligent design / construction
- Negligent maintenance
- Negligent operation
- Failure to warn
**Strict liability (products):**
- Defective design
- Manufacturing defect
- Failure to warn / inadequate instructions
**Premises liability:**
- Failure to maintain safe premises
- Code violations
- Inadequate fire safety
**Workers' comp + third-party claims:**
- Workers' comp from employer
- Third-party claim against equipment manufacturer / contractor
## Time-critical issues
- **Evidence preservation** — burned property, vehicles, products
- **Photo documentation** — injuries over time as healing progresses
- **Medical bills + records**
- **Witness statements**
- **Fire investigation reports**
- **Manufacturer recall investigations**
## Common defenses
- **User error** — improper use of product
- **Misuse** — not as intended
- **Comparative fault** — plaintiff's actions contributed
- **Open and obvious danger**
- **Pre-existing conditions** affecting healing
- **Independent intervening causes**
- **State of the art** — defense for products
- **Statute of limitations / repose**
## What you should do
If you've suffered a burn injury in Illinois: focus on medical care first. Document everything (photos especially over time). Preserve evidence (the product / scene). Don't sign any insurance company waivers without legal review. Hire an experienced burn-injury attorney. Most Illinois burn-injury attorneys work on contingency and front substantial expert costs.
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*This guide is general information about Illinois law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Burn cases require specialized expertise. Talk to a licensed Illinois catastrophic-injury attorney about your specific case.*
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.