How Much Is a Knee Injury Worth in Ireland?
Quick answer: In Ireland, a knee injury is worth roughly €500 to €110,000 in general damages under the Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021), depending on severity and long-term effect. Minor soft-tissue injuries that recover within months sit at the low end; severe joint disruption needing a knee replacement sits at the top. Special damages for lost earnings and treatment are paid on top. Figures are guidelines, not promises, and every case is assessed on its own facts.
What's new (2026): the proposed 16.7% increase to Personal Injuries Guidelines awards did not take effect, so the original 2021 knee brackets still apply and the general damages cap remains €550,000. Reform of how the Guidelines are adopted was announced in January 2026.
At a glance: knee injury compensation in Ireland
Quick answers
How much is a knee injury worth? Roughly €500 to €110,000 in general damages, depending on severity and long-term effect.
What decides the amount? The medical prognosis — recovery time, surgery, instability, and osteoarthritis risk — not the label on the injury.
Does the cause change the value? The bracket is the same, but workplace and medical-negligence claims often produce higher totals.
Do I need a solicitor? Not legally, but the medical evidence drives the award, so preparation matters.
Knee injuries are valued in Ireland using the Personal Injuries Guidelines, the framework that replaced the Book of Quantum in April 2021 [1]. This page sets out the current knee brackets and what real awards look like, using the latest Injuries Resolution Board data. It also shows how the value changes with the cause — a workplace fall, a road traffic collision, a slip in a public place, or negligent medical treatment. It explains the one phrase in the Guidelines that decides which bracket your knee falls into, and confirms the legal position in 2026 after a proposed increase was set aside.
Ireland only. These figures apply in the Republic of Ireland. They are not UK Judicial College Guidelines figures and not the Northern Ireland "Green Book". The systems use different brackets, different legislation, and different time limits. If you searched a figure in pounds, it does not apply to an Irish claim.
Contents
Knee injury compensation brackets in Ireland
Knee injury compensation in Ireland is set by the Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021), which group knee injuries by severity and long-term effect [1]. The brackets below are general damages — compensation for pain, suffering and loss of amenity. They do not include your financial losses, which are claimed separately as special damages.
The Guidelines divide knee injuries into severe, moderate and minor categories, with the severe band split into three tiers and the minor band split by recovery time. Where your injury sits depends far more on the medical prognosis than on the label you give the injury.
Severe knee injuries: €35,000 to €110,000
| Severity tier | What it involves | General damages |
|---|---|---|
| Severe (i) | Serious knee injury with disruption of the joint, gross ligament damage, lengthy treatment, and major loss of function, where a knee replacement (arthroplasty) or joint fusion (arthrodesis) has happened or is inevitable. | €75,000 – €110,000 |
| Severe (ii) | A leg fracture extending into the knee joint, causing constant permanent pain, limited movement, and a real risk of osteoarthritis and future surgery. | €55,000 – €75,000 |
| Severe (iii) | Continuing pain, limited movement, instability or deformity, with a risk of degenerative change and the likely need for remedial surgery — short of a full replacement. | €35,000 – €55,000 |
Source: Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021), Section N [1]. General damages (pain and suffering) only. Awards vary case by case.
Moderate and minor knee injuries: €500 to €35,000
| Category | What it involves | General damages |
|---|---|---|
| Moderate | Dislocation, torn cartilage or meniscus damage causing minor instability, weakness or wasting; or an injury that speeds up a pre-existing degenerative condition over years. | €15,000 – €35,000 |
| Minor (1–2 years) | Soft-tissue injury, twisting or bruising where substantial recovery — or recovery to a nuisance level — takes one to two years. | €6,000 – €12,000 |
| Minor (under 1 year) | Substantial recovery without surgery between six months and one year. | €3,000 – €6,000 |
| Minor (under 6 months) | Minor sprains, twisting, bruising or superficial cuts with full recovery within six months. | €500 – €3,000 |
Source: Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021), Section N [1]. The Guidelines remain the only valuation framework in force in 2026 — see the 2026 position below. For the full lower-limb chapter, see our guide to the Personal Injuries Guidelines for lower limb injuries.
What is each type of knee injury worth?
The Guidelines value a knee injury by its severity and lasting effect, not by its clinical name. So the same diagnosis can fall in different brackets depending on recovery, surgery and long-term risk. The table below shows where each common knee injury typically sits, but the prognosis decides the figure.
| Knee injury type | Typical bracket (depends on outcome) | What raises it |
|---|---|---|
| Soft-tissue / sprain | Minor: €500 – €12,000 | Symptoms lasting beyond a year |
| Meniscus (cartilage) tear | Minor to moderate: €6,000 – €35,000 | Surgery, instability, ongoing pain |
| ACL or PCL (cruciate ligament) tear | Moderate to severe: €15,000 – €55,000 | Reconstruction surgery, lasting instability |
| MCL or LCL (collateral ligament) injury | Minor to moderate: €6,000 – €35,000 | Surgery or chronic laxity |
| Patella (kneecap) fracture | Moderate to severe: €15,000 – €75,000 | Fracture into the joint, future surgery |
| Knee dislocation | Moderate to severe: €15,000 – €55,000+ | Ligament damage, repeat dislocations |
| Fracture extending into the knee joint | Severe: €55,000 – €110,000 | Permanent pain, osteoarthritis, knee replacement |
Ranges are indicative and span more than one Guidelines bracket because outcome — not diagnosis — sets the figure. Source: Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021), Section N [1]. General damages only.
A separate rule applies where an accident worsens a knee you already had trouble with. If a fall accelerates pre-existing osteoarthritis, you are compensated for the acceleration — the extra years of symptoms the accident brought forward — not for the underlying condition itself. The medical report should state how many years of deterioration were accelerated, because that figure drives this part of the valuation.
What knee injuries actually settle for: Injuries Resolution Board 2025 data
The brackets show what is possible. The Injuries Resolution Board data shows what is typical — and the gap matters. In the first half of 2025 the overall median award across all injuries was €13,300, down 28% from €18,422 in 2020, and nearly 60% of all awards came in under €15,000 [2]. Most knee claims are valued as minor or moderate, not severe.
One pattern stands out for knee claims. Knee injuries are a small share of motor awards but a much larger share of workplace and public-liability awards. In other words, a knee claim in Ireland is far more likely to come from a fall at work or in a public place than from a car crash.
| Claim type | Knee share of awards | What this tells you |
|---|---|---|
| Employer liability (workplace) | 9% | Highest knee share — falls, manual handling, machinery |
| Public liability (slip / trip / fall) | 8% | Second highest — uneven footpaths, wet floors, stairs |
| Motor liability (road traffic) | 3% | Lowest — knee is usually a secondary injury in a crash |
| All awards (most significant injury) | ~4% | Knee overall across every claim type |
The headline figures in the Guidelines describe the ceiling. The Injuries Resolution Board data describes the floor most claims actually land on.
The phrase that decides your bracket: "substantial recovery"
"Substantial recovery" appears in four of the seven knee brackets, and it is the single phrase that decides whether a knee injury is worth €3,000 or €35,000. Yet the Guidelines never define it clinically [1]. In practice, substantial recovery does not mean pain-free. It means the knee no longer significantly interferes with your daily activities or quality of life.
A knee that aches on cold mornings but allows normal walking, driving and work has substantially recovered, even though it is not perfect. A knee that still locks, gives way, or stops you kneeling or climbing stairs has not. That difference can move the claim into a higher bracket. This is why the wording of your medical report matters so much. A report that records lingering instability and a risk of future osteoarthritis supports a very different valuation from one that simply says "improving".
In our experience: claimants often describe their knee as "grand now" to a doctor while still avoiding stairs or sport. If the medical report does not capture that ongoing limitation, the assessment tends to land at the bottom of the bracket. Be precise about what you still cannot do.
What most knee injury guides get wrong
Most Irish knee injury pages share three errors, and each one can cost a claimant money. Knowing them helps you read any valuation with a sharper eye.
First, many still quote the Book of Quantum figures — the old system replaced in April 2021 [1]. Those numbers were often higher for soft-tissue knee injuries, so a page using them can set a false expectation. Second, a large share of results that rank in Ireland are actually UK or Northern Ireland pages using pounds, the Judicial College Guidelines, or the Green Book — none of which apply in the Republic. Third, almost no guide separates the value of a knee injury by cause. Yet the Injuries Resolution Board data shows knee claims behave very differently in workplace, public-liability and motor cases [2]. This page corrects all three: current figures only, Republic of Ireland law only, and value broken down by how the injury happened — including the medical-negligence route the others skip.
Knee injury value by cause: work, road, and public place
The injury bracket is the same whoever caused it, but the cause shapes the evidence, the route, and often the special damages. The three most common causes of an Irish knee claim are workplace accidents, public-liability falls, and road traffic collisions.
Workplace knee injuries
Workplace accidents produce the highest share of knee awards and, on the data, the highest median awards of any claim type [2]. An employer owes a statutory duty under the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work Act 2005 to provide a safe system of work [3]. Knee injuries here come from falls from height, slips on factory or kitchen floors, crush injuries from machinery, and prolonged kneeling. Because these injuries often keep a manual worker off the job for months, the special damages for lost earnings frequently exceed the general-damages bracket itself.
Slip, trip and fall knee injuries in public places
Public-liability falls are the second most common source of knee awards [2]. An occupier owes a duty under the Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 to take reasonable care for visitors [4]. Typical causes are uneven or broken footpaths, unmarked wet floors, poor lighting on stairs, and trip hazards in shops. The practical challenge is evidence: securing CCTV before it is overwritten, photographing the hazard, and getting an early MRI to document ligament or meniscus damage that an X-ray cannot show.
Road traffic knee injuries
Knee injuries are the smallest share of motor awards, usually because the knee is a secondary injury alongside whiplash [2]. A dashboard impact can drive the knee into the joint and damage the posterior cruciate ligament. These injuries often look like "just a sprain" at the scene but reveal structural damage on a later MRI. For the full mechanics of a road traffic knee claim, see our dedicated guide to a knee injury after a car accident.
Can you claim for a knee injury caused by medical negligence?
A knee injury caused by negligent medical treatment is valued on the same Personal Injuries Guidelines brackets, but the claim follows a completely different route. Medical negligence claims are excluded from the Injuries Resolution Board and must be brought directly in the courts [5]. This is the area most general guides ignore, and it is often where the most serious knee outcomes arise.
To succeed, you must show the care fell below the standard set by the Dunne principles from Dunne v National Maternity Hospital [1989] IR 91 — the test for medical negligence in Ireland, reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in Morrissey v HSE [2020] IESC 6 [6]. The test asks whether the treatment was such that no medical practitioner of equal standing and skill would have provided it while exercising ordinary care. This differs from the UK's Bolam test: an Irish court can reject a body of medical opinion if it considers that opinion unreasonable, which gives Irish judges wider scope to find negligence.
How knee injuries arise from negligent treatment
Orthopaedic negligence involving the knee tends to fall into three groups. The first is surgical error during a knee replacement or arthroscopy. This includes poor implant alignment or sizing, nerve damage causing chronic pain or foot drop, or material left in the joint. Each can force painful revision surgery. The second is failure to manage post-operative infection, which can destroy bone and require removal of the implant. The third, and most common, is missed diagnosis in the emergency department.
The Ottawa Knee Rule is the validated tool that tells an emergency doctor when a knee X-ray is required after trauma [7]. It applies, for example, where the patient cannot bear weight or cannot flex the knee to 90 degrees. If those signs are present and no imaging is ordered, and a fracture is missed as a result, that can be a breach of the standard of care. Persistent locking, clicking or instability beyond two weeks should also prompt an MRI, because a standard X-ray cannot show a torn cruciate ligament or meniscus [4]. A missed knee fracture is one example of a wider pattern; see our guide to missed fracture negligence claims.
Why medical negligence knee claims often sit higher in the bracket: a negligent delay or surgical error often turns a recoverable injury into a permanent one. It can accelerate osteoarthritis, force a knee replacement, or cause nerve damage. That moves the claim toward the severe brackets and increases both general and special damages. For the broader picture, see our overview of medical negligence injuries in Ireland.
What pushes a knee injury claim up or down the bracket
Two people with the "same" knee injury can receive very different awards, because the Guidelines value the consequences, not the label. We assess where a knee claim sits using what we call the Knee Injury Value Multiplier — five evidence-led factors that move a claim within its bracket. None of them is the injury name; all of them come from the medical and personal record.
| Factor | Pushes the award up when… | Pulls it down when… |
|---|---|---|
| Medical evidence | The report records ongoing limitation and future risk in detail | The report simply says "resolved" or "improving" |
| Osteoarthritis risk | There is a documented risk of degenerative change | Full recovery with no long-term risk |
| Surgery | Surgery was needed, or is likely in future | The injury settled without surgery |
| Functional impact | You cannot return to a physical job, sport or daily tasks | You returned to normal activity quickly |
| Recovery time | Symptoms last well beyond a year | Substantial recovery within six months |
Read together, the Knee Injury Value Multiplier explains why a medical-negligence knee claim often settles higher than an identical accident injury: negligent treatment tends to score badly on several factors at once — surgery, osteoarthritis risk, and functional impact. It is also why the wording of a single medical report can shift a claim by tens of thousands of euro.
Knee Injury Value Multiplier: self-check
Tick the factors that apply to your knee injury. This shows the direction your claim is likely pushed within its bracket and what evidence supports it. It does not estimate an amount — only a solicitor and your medical evidence can value a claim.
This self-check is general information, not legal advice or a valuation. Every claim is assessed on its own facts under the Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021).
Where more than one injury is involved — a common situation in a serious fall or crash — the Guidelines do not allow each injury bracket to be simply added together [1]. Instead, the assessor identifies the most significant injury, values that, then applies a proportionate uplift to reflect the additional pain and limitation from the other injuries. If your knee is the dominant injury, it anchors the valuation; if it is secondary to a worse injury, it adds to the uplift.
Worked examples: how the same injury name lands in different brackets
The examples below are illustrative, not predictions. They show how the Knee Injury Value Multiplier changes the bracket for injuries that share a label. Your own claim depends on your medical evidence and circumstances.
| Illustrative scenario | Likely bracket | What moved it |
|---|---|---|
| Knee sprain after a trip; full recovery, no surgery, back to normal in 4 months | Minor: €500 – €3,000 | Short recovery, no lasting effect |
| Torn meniscus; keyhole surgery, returned to a desk job after 9 months, mild aching remains | Moderate: €15,000 – €35,000 | Surgery plus residual symptoms |
| Torn meniscus; manual worker, ongoing instability, cannot kneel, documented osteoarthritis risk | Severe (iii): €35,000 – €55,000 | Functional loss plus degenerative risk |
| Fracture into the knee joint; constant pain, future knee replacement likely | Severe (ii): €55,000 – €75,000 | Permanent pain and inevitable surgery |
Illustrative only — every claim is assessed on its own facts and medical evidence. Brackets: Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021), Section N [1]. General damages only.
How a knee injury is valued alongside other injuries
Take a road traffic claim with a moderate knee injury and a whiplash neck injury. The assessor does not add the two brackets together. They identify the dominant injury — say the knee at €20,000 — then apply a proportionate uplift for the neck, landing on a single overall figure that reflects both. A claimant who simply adds two brackets will almost always overestimate. The uplift is judged on the combined impact on daily life, not on arithmetic.
General damages vs special damages
Every knee injury award in Ireland has two parts, assessed separately and added together. Understanding the split explains why a "minor" knee injury on the Guidelines can still produce a substantial total.
General damages compensate for pain, suffering and loss of amenity. These are the bracket figures set out above. Special damages compensate for financial loss caused by the injury — lost earnings, medical and physiotherapy costs, future treatment, and care or help at home. Special damages are not capped by the Guidelines and, for a worker off the job for months, can be the larger figure. For how courts treat each category, see our guide to general damages in Irish claims.
One point catches many claimants out. For a typical minor or moderate knee injury, the special-damages element is often modest — a few physiotherapy sessions and a short period off work. The general-damages bracket does most of the heavy lifting. The balance flips in severe cases, where future surgery, long absence from a physical job, and ongoing care can make special damages the dominant part of the total. The lesson is to document every financial loss from the outset, however small it seems.
Time limits and the date of knowledge
In Ireland you generally have two years from the date of the accident, or from your date of knowledge, to start a personal injury claim. The two-year period was set by section 7 of the Civil Liability and Courts Act 2004 (which reduced the previous three-year limit, effective 31 March 2005) and runs by reference to the date-of-knowledge rules in the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act 1991 [8]. This is a shorter window than the UK's three years, which is one reason UK figures and rules should never be relied on for an Irish claim.
The date of knowledge rule matters most where the harm is not obvious immediately. With a failing knee replacement, for example, the implant may loosen slowly over years before the problem is identified. Under the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act 1991, the two-year clock starts only when you first knew, or could reasonably have known, that you had a significant injury, that it was caused by the treatment, and who was responsible [9]. This can give time to claim even where the original surgery was more than two years ago.
How are children's knee injury claims valued?
A child's knee injury is valued on the same Guidelines brackets as an adult's, but the process differs in three ways [11]. A child cannot bring a claim themselves: a parent or guardian acts as their "next friend". The two-year time limit does not start until the child's 18th birthday, so a claim can usually be brought up to their 20th birthday — though acting early preserves evidence. And any settlement must be approved by a judge, with the compensation held by the court until the child turns 18. We cover the detail on our child injury claims page.
How long does a knee injury claim take?
An accident-related knee claim that settles at the Injuries Resolution Board typically takes around 9 to 18 months. The timing varies with the injury and how quickly the prognosis becomes clear. After you apply, the respondent has 90 days to consent to the Board assessing the claim [5]. If they consent, the Board generally aims to issue an assessment within about nine months. A knee injury often needs time before that assessment, because the medical report should wait until the recovery path and any osteoarthritis risk are clear.
If either side rejects the assessment, or if the case goes to court, the timeline lengthens — court proceedings can take a further one to two years or more. Medical negligence knee claims, which bypass the Board, usually take longer again because they require independent expert reports and court proceedings from the outset.
Knee claim deadline checker
Pick the situation that fits to see the time-limit rule that usually applies. This is an indicative guide, not advice — the date of knowledge can change the deadline, so confirm your exact date with a solicitor.
Indicative only. The two-year period and its start date depend on your facts; the date of knowledge rule may apply. Always confirm your deadline with a qualified solicitor.
What if the knee injury was partly my fault?
You can still claim, but your compensation is reduced by your share of the blame. Under section 34 of the Civil Liability Act 1961, where an injury is caused partly by your own fault and partly by another's, the award is cut by the percentage the court considers just [13]. If you are found 25% responsible, you recover 75% of the value. Being partly at fault does not bar a knee claim — it adjusts it.
For a knee injury, it might be argued where you wore unsuitable footwear on a known hazard, ignored a clearly marked and cordoned-off spillage, or did not follow safety equipment rules at work. The reduction is decided case by case on the evidence, and the defendant must specifically plead it.
Is knee injury compensation taxable in Ireland?
No — compensation for a personal injury is generally exempt from income tax and capital gains tax in Ireland. That applies whether it comes from an Injuries Resolution Board award, an out-of-court settlement, or a court [12]. The lump sum itself is not taxed as income, and it is not treated as a chargeable gain for capital gains tax.
There is one limited exception to be aware of. Income you later earn from investing the compensation is normally taxable like any other investment income — unless you are permanently and totally incapacitated by the injury, in which case that investment income can also be exempt under section 189 of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 [12]. Tax is fact-specific, so check your own position with Revenue or an accountant.
The 2026 Guidelines position: what happened to the proposed increase
As of 2026, the original 2021 figures still apply. A proposed increase of 16.7% to all Guidelines awards was put forward by the Judicial Council in early 2025, but the Government did not bring it forward for approval, and it did not take effect [10]. New legislation to reform how the Guidelines are adopted was announced in January 2026 [11].
The practical effect is simple. The brackets on this page are current, and the general damages cap for the most catastrophic injuries remains €550,000 — not the €642,000 the proposed increase would have created [10]. Many competitor pages either still quote the withdrawn Book of Quantum figures from before 2021, or wrongly describe the increase as if it were already in force. For the full background, see our guide to the 2026 update to the Personal Injuries Guidelines.
How a knee injury claim is valued and paid
For most accident-related knee injuries, the claim starts with an application to the Injuries Resolution Board, which obtains an independent medical report and issues an assessment based on the Guidelines [5]. Both sides can accept or reject that assessment. Where it is rejected, the Board issues an authorisation allowing the claim to proceed to court. Medical negligence knee claims skip the Board entirely and go straight to court [5].
The numbers behind that process are worth knowing. In 2024 the respondent consent rate was over 70%, and the acceptance rate — where both sides accept the Board's figure — reached about 50%, the highest since the Guidelines began, up from 44% in 2021 [12]. So roughly half of all assessments are still rejected by one side and move toward court. Rejecting an assessment carries a real risk. If a court later awards less than the Board's figure, you can be liable for the respondent's legal costs as well as your own [5].
Why an Injuries Resolution Board knee assessment can come in low
A knee assessment can land at the bottom of the bracket when the independent medical report does not capture the full picture. The report is a snapshot. A report taken while the knee is still settling, or one that records "improving" without noting residual instability or osteoarthritis risk, gives the assessor a thinner record to work from. In our experience, three things most often hold a knee valuation down. Imaging taken too early to show ligament or meniscus damage; a report that omits the effect on a physical job; and no documented prognosis on degenerative change. Each is fixable with the right evidence at the right time, which is the main reason the assessment figure is not always the right valuation.
You are not legally required to use a solicitor to apply to the Injuries Resolution Board. In practice, the value of a knee claim turns on the quality and timing of the medical evidence. What matters most is whether the report captures future osteoarthritis risk and any need for later surgery. That is where careful preparation makes the difference between an award at the bottom of a bracket and one that reflects the full, long-term effect of the injury.
Evidence checklist: protecting the value of a knee injury claim
The award follows the evidence. These are the steps that most often protect a knee claim's value, in rough order of timing:
- Get the knee imaged at the right time. An X-ray can miss ligament and meniscus damage; persistent locking, clicking or instability beyond two weeks should prompt an MRI [4].
- Report and record the injury early — to the Gardaí, your employer, or the occupier — so there is a contemporaneous record of how it happened.
- Tell the doctor what you still cannot do. Kneeling, stairs, driving, sport, lifting children, returning to a physical job — each one matters to the valuation.
- Ask that the report address future risk — osteoarthritis, and any likely need for later surgery such as a knee replacement.
- Keep every receipt. Physiotherapy, prescriptions, travel to appointments, and any lost earnings are recoverable as special damages.
This is general information, not medical or legal advice. Your treating doctors decide what imaging and treatment you need.
Key terms explained
Short definitions of the terms used on this page, in plain English.
- General damages
- Compensation for pain, suffering and loss of amenity — the bracket figures set by the Personal Injuries Guidelines.
- Special damages
- Compensation for financial loss caused by the injury, such as lost earnings, medical costs and future treatment. Not capped by the Guidelines.
- Personal Injuries Guidelines
- The framework adopted in 2021 that courts and the Injuries Resolution Board use to value injuries. It replaced the Book of Quantum.
- Injuries Resolution Board (IRB)
- The State body (formerly PIAB) that assesses most accident claims before court. Medical negligence claims are excluded from it.
- Meniscus
- The C-shaped cartilage that cushions the knee joint. A torn meniscus is a common knee injury.
- Cruciate ligament (ACL / PCL)
- The two ligaments crossing inside the knee that control stability. A cruciate tear often needs reconstruction surgery.
- Arthroplasty
- A total knee replacement, where the damaged joint surfaces are replaced with an implant.
- Arthrodesis
- A surgical fusion of the knee joint, used where a replacement is not suitable.
- Osteoarthritis
- Degenerative "wear and tear" of the joint. A documented risk of future osteoarthritis raises a knee injury's value.
- Date of knowledge
- The point when you first knew, or should have known, that you had a significant injury, what caused it, and who was responsible. The two-year limit can run from this date.
Talk to us about your knee injury. We are personal injury and medical negligence solicitors based in Dublin, acting for clients across Ireland. For a free, no-obligation assessment of your knee injury claim, call 01 9036408 or email us. This page is information, not legal advice — every case is assessed on its own facts.
References
- [1] Judicial Council — Personal Injuries Guidelines, Section N (Knee Injuries) (2021).
- [2] Injuries Resolution Board — Personal Injuries Award Values report, first half of 2025.
- [3] Office of the Attorney General — Safety, Health and Welfare at Work Act 2005 (linked at first mention above).
- [4] Office of the Attorney General — Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 (linked at first mention above).
- [5] Citizens Information — Injuries Resolution Board (Updated 2026).
- [6] Courts Service / Supreme Court — Morrissey v Health Service Executive [2020] IESC 6, reaffirming the Dunne principles from Dunne v National Maternity Hospital [1989] IR 91.
- [7] Ottawa Knee Rule — Stiell IG et al., derivation and validation of a decision rule for knee radiography in acute injuries, JAMA / Annals of Emergency Medicine (peer-reviewed).
- [8] Office of the Attorney General — Civil Liability and Courts Act 2004, s.7 (two-year personal injury limit, reducing the former three-year period), amending the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act 1991; minority suspends time until age 18 under the Statute of Limitations 1957, s.49.
- [9] Office of the Attorney General — Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act 1991 (date of knowledge; linked at first mention above).
- [10] RTÉ News — 16.7% personal injury award increase will not go ahead (July 2025).
- [11] Irish Legal News — Further reforms to adoption of personal injuries guidelines (January 2026).
- [12] Injuries Resolution Board — Annual Report 2024 (consent and acceptance rates); corroborated by gov.ie and Insurance Ireland (July 2025). Tax position: Revenue — Personal injury compensation payments (Section 189 TCA 1997).
- [13] Law Reform Commission — Civil Liability Act 1961, section 34 (contributory negligence).
Common Questions About Knee Injury Compensation
How much compensation will I get for a knee injury in Ireland?
Between about €500 and €110,000 in general damages, depending on severity, under the Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021). Most knee claims fall in the minor to moderate range; the overall median Injuries Resolution Board award was €13,300 in the first half of 2025.
Why it matters: the bracket is set by the long-term effect of the injury, not the name of the injury.
Next step: See the knee brackets • Sources
How much is a soft-tissue knee injury worth?
A minor soft-tissue knee injury is worth roughly €500 to €12,000, depending on how long recovery takes. Full recovery within six months sits at the low end; ongoing symptoms lasting one to two years sit higher.
Why it matters: recovery time is the main driver in the minor band.
Next step: What "substantial recovery" means
How much is a torn ACL or meniscus knee injury worth?
A torn cruciate ligament or meniscus is usually valued in the moderate band, around €15,000 to €35,000, and higher if it leads to instability, surgery or a risk of osteoarthritis. The exact figure depends on the prognosis recorded in your medical report.
Why it matters: these injuries often need an MRI to document properly.
Next step: What pushes the award up
Can I claim for a knee injury caused by medical negligence?
Yes. A knee injury caused by negligent surgery, a missed fracture, or delayed treatment can be claimed, but it goes straight to court rather than the Injuries Resolution Board. You must show the care fell below the standard set by the Dunne principles.
Why it matters: medical negligence claims are excluded from the IRB and need expert medical evidence.
Next step: Medical negligence knee claims • Medical negligence injuries
Did knee injury awards go up by 16.7% in 2025?
No. The proposed 16.7% increase to Personal Injuries Guidelines awards was not approved by the Government and did not take effect. The original 2021 figures still apply in 2026, and the general damages cap remains €550,000.
Why it matters: many websites wrongly describe the increase as already in force.
Next step: The 2026 position • 2026 Guidelines update
Is a knee injury worth more from a workplace accident than a car accident?
The injury bracket is the same, but workplace knee claims tend to produce higher overall awards because the injuries are often more serious and the lost-earnings special damages are larger. Knee injuries are also far more common in workplace and public-liability claims than in road traffic claims.
Why it matters: the cause shapes the special damages, not the general-damages bracket.
Next step: Knee injury value by cause
Can I still claim if my knee pain started weeks after the accident?
Often yes. Knee injuries can present as a minor sprain at first and reveal structural damage later on an MRI. The two-year time limit generally runs from your date of knowledge, so delayed symptoms do not automatically end your right to claim — but you should get advice promptly.
Why it matters: the date of knowledge rule can protect a delayed-onset claim.
Next step: Time limits and date of knowledge
How long do I have to make a knee injury claim in Ireland?
Generally two years from the date of the accident or your date of knowledge. This is shorter than the UK's three-year limit. For medical negligence, the same two years runs from when you knew the injury was caused by the treatment.
Why it matters: missing the limitation period usually ends the claim.
Next step: Time limits explained
Do I need a solicitor to value a knee injury claim?
Not legally. You can apply to the Injuries Resolution Board yourself. In practice, the value of a knee claim depends heavily on how well the medical report captures long-term effects like osteoarthritis risk and future surgery. That is where careful preparation matters most.
Why it matters: the medical evidence drives the award within the bracket.
Next step: How a claim is valued and paid
Is the Injuries Resolution Board figure for my knee the final amount?
Not necessarily. Either side can reject the Board's assessment, after which the Board issues an authorisation to take the claim to court. If you believe an assessment undervalues a lasting knee injury, you do not have to accept it. Rejecting it carries its own risks, so take advice first.
Why it matters: the first figure offered is not always the right valuation.
Next step: How a claim is valued and paid
Related guides
Internal guides: Personal injury compensation amounts in Ireland • Personal Injuries Guidelines for lower limb injuries • Knee injury after a car accident • Medical negligence injuries • Missed fracture negligence claims • General damages in Irish claims
Gary Matthews Solicitors
Medical negligence solicitors, Dublin
We help people every day of the week (weekends and bank holidays included) that have either been injured or harmed as a result of an accident or have suffered from negligence or malpractice.
Contact us at our Dublin office to get started with your claim today
