Michigan cruise ship injuries are governed by federal maritime/admiralty law, not state law — passenger tickets typically include forum clauses (often Miami federal court) + 1-year statute of limitations.
Published May 9, 2026
## Cruise ship injuries in Michigan
Cruise ship injuries are governed by **federal maritime law** (general maritime + admiralty), not Michigan state law. Michigan cruise passengers face unique procedural requirements + tight deadlines.
## Federal maritime jurisdiction
**Why federal law applies:**
- Vessels operate on navigable waters
- Federal admiralty jurisdiction (US Constitution Art. III)
- General maritime law applies
- Specific federal statutes
- Foreign-flagged ships still subject (typically)
**Result:**
- ${s.name} state PI law generally inapplicable
- Federal procedural rules
- Specific statute of limitations
- Specific forum clauses
## Common cruise injuries
**Slip + falls:**
- Wet decks
- Spilled drinks / water
- Worn carpeting
- Stairway falls
- Pool decks
**Medical issues:**
- Inadequate medical care
- Misdiagnosis at sea
- Norovirus / outbreak
- Food poisoning
- Allergic reactions
- Heart attacks at sea
- Birth-related injuries
**Excursion injuries:**
- Snorkeling / diving accidents
- ATV / horseback excursions
- Bus / vehicle accidents
- Local tour guide negligence
- Often disclaimed by cruise lines
**Pool / waterpark:**
- Drowning / near-drowning
- Inadequate supervision
- Slide injuries
- Diving injuries
**Ship malfunctions:**
- Engine fires
- Power failures
- Stranded at sea
- Mechanical failures
- Ventilation issues
**Sexual assault:**
- By crew members
- By other passengers
- Inadequate security
- Underreported epidemic
**Cruise ship sickness:**
- Norovirus (very common)
- Other outbreaks
- Food contamination
- Water contamination
**Drowning / man overboard:**
- Pool / hot tub drownings
- Falls overboard
- Inadequate barriers
- Inadequate response
## The passenger ticket contract
**The fine print matters:**
**Common provisions:**
- Forum selection clause
- Statute of limitations (typically 1 year)
- Notice requirements (often 6 months)
- Jury waiver
- Damages limitations (sometimes)
- Class-action waiver
- Choice of law
- Arbitration provisions
**These are GENERALLY enforceable.**
## Forum selection clauses
**Most major cruise lines:**
- **Carnival** — US District Court Southern District of Florida (Miami)
- **Royal Caribbean** — same
- **NCL** — same
- **Princess** — Los Angeles federal court
- **MSC** — Naples (international cruises)
- Specific to itinerary
**Carnival v. Shute (1991):**
- Supreme Court upheld forum clauses
- Even on small print
- Even for small claims
- Standard practice
## Statute of limitations
**Generally 1 year:**
- Per Section 30508 of Title 46
- Often shorter than state PI deadlines
- Strictly enforced
- Cannot be extended typically
**Notice requirement:**
- Often 6 months written notice
- Notice to specific cruise line address
- Specific contents required
- Failure = case barred
**${s.name} state PI deadlines** generally don't apply to cruise cases.
## Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA)
**46 USC § 30301 et seq.:**
- Applies to deaths beyond US territorial waters
- Limited damages — pecuniary loss only
- No pain & suffering
- No loss of consortium for adults
- Significant limitation
**For deaths in US waters or in port:**
- General maritime law applies
- More damages available
- Different procedural rules
## Cruise line defenses
**Common defenses:**
**1. Lack of notice:**
- Failed to give 6-month notice
- Improperly served
- Wrong address
- Strict enforcement
**2. Statute of limitations:**
- 1-year deadline missed
- Strict enforcement
**3. Forum selection:**
- Filed in wrong court
- Transfer or dismissal
**4. Standard of care:**
- Reasonable care under circumstances
- Not strict liability
- Specific maritime standards
**5. Independent contractor:**
- Excursion operators not employees
- Limited cruise line liability
- Ticket disclaimers
**6. Comparative fault:**
- Passenger's negligence
- Reduces recovery
**7. Liability caps in tickets:**
- Specific caps for some claims
- Generally enforceable
- Sometimes challenged
## Damages
**Available in maritime cases:**
- Past + future medical expenses
- Past + future lost wages
- Pain & suffering
- Mental anguish
- Disfigurement
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Sometimes loss of consortium (state-dependent)
**Limited in DOHSA cases:**
- Pecuniary loss only
- Lost income / support
- Lost services
- No pain & suffering
**Punitive damages:**
- Available in maritime cases
- Townsend v. Vessel Vincenza (2024) — recent Supreme Court ruling on availability
- Specific cases
- Limited but possible
## Sexual assault on cruises
**Increasingly significant:**
**Cruise Vessel Security and Safety Act (2010):**
- Reporting requirements
- Security measures
- Crime statistics published
- FBI investigation jurisdiction
**Civil claims:**
- Negligent hiring / retention
- Inadequate security
- Failure to investigate
- Failure to warn
- Concealment
- Significant settlements + verdicts
**Class actions:**
- Some industry-wide claims
- Specific to cruise lines
## Critical evidence preservation
**Immediately:**
- Photos of scene + injury
- Witness contact info
- Crew member names + numbers
- Ship's medical records (request copies)
- Incident reports (get copy at time)
- Receipts (medical, etc.)
- Communications with cruise line
- Surveillance video preservation request
**Cruise line will often:**
- Conduct own investigation
- Take statements
- Photograph scene
- Document medical care
- Disagree with passenger version
## Excursion injuries
**Cruise lines often disclaim liability:**
- Independent contractor status
- Foreign tour operators
- Limited liability for excursions
- Ticket disclaimers
**Sometimes liable:**
- Negligent recommendation
- Misrepresentation about safety
- Concealment of known risks
- Specific control over operator
- Vicarious liability rare but possible
## International issues
**Foreign-flagged ships:**
- Most cruise ships not US-flagged
- Bahamas, Liberia, Panama common
- Limits some US protections
- Choice of law issues
**Foreign port injuries:**
- Local law sometimes applies
- Limited US court jurisdiction
- Difficult evidence collection
- Foreign defendants
**Foreign passengers:**
- May have different rights
- Forum selection still applies typically
## Specific cruise line locations
**Major US ports:**
- Miami (busiest)
- Port Everglades / Fort Lauderdale
- Port Canaveral
- Port of Galveston
- Port of Los Angeles
- Seattle
- New York
- New Orleans
- ${s.name} ports if applicable
## Strategic considerations
**For cruise passengers:**
**Before cruise:**
- Read ticket terms
- Buy travel insurance
- Document any pre-existing conditions
**During cruise (if injured):**
- Report immediately
- Document everything
- Get medical care + records
- Witness contact info
- Photograph scene
- Preserve evidence
**After cruise:**
- Don't sign anything from cruise line
- Don't speak to claims adjuster
- Send 6-month notice promptly
- Hire maritime attorney quickly
- File within 1 year
## What you should do
If you're injured on a cruise from Michigan or while on cruise: hire maritime / admiralty attorney IMMEDIATELY — deadlines are tight + procedural requirements strict. Most maritime attorneys handle these on contingency. Specific maritime PI specialists exist (often Florida-based given Miami forum). Don't talk to cruise line claims department before counsel.
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*This guide is general information about federal maritime law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. Cruise ship cases are highly technical. Talk to a licensed maritime / admiralty 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.