Injured at a Las Vegas Casino: Can You Sue?
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The casino itself is not always the only defendant. In some cases, there are multiple parties. Depending on how the injury happened, the potentially liable parties may include the casino operator, the property owner, outside security companies, cleaning contractors, maintenance vendors, event operators, valet companies, or even the casino’s parent company.
That matters because liability often follows control. The right question is not just “Where did the injury happen?” It is “Who controlled that area, who created the hazard, and who had the duty to fix it?” A lawyer may also look at surveillance footage, maintenance logs, staffing records, prior complaints, and contract documents to identify everyone who may be held responsible.
For a full walkthrough of every step, see our dedicated guide on what to do if you had an accident in a Las Vegas casino.
A personal injury lawsuit or settlement can include both economic and non-economic damages. The exact amount depends on the facts, the seriousness of the injuries, and how the injury affected your work and daily life. You may be able to recover:
A strong claim usually ties those losses to hard proof. That means medical records, treatment notes, wage records, photos, professional opinions when needed, and a clear timeline of how the injury occurred. For a full breakdown of what you may be entitled to, see our guide on what damages you can claim if injured at a Nevada casino.
Casinos and their insurers often defend these claims by arguing that the danger was open and obvious, that the patron was distracted, that the spill occurred moments before the fall, or that the injury was minor or preexisting.
In security cases, they may argue that the criminal act was not foreseeable. In restaurant or buffet claims, they may question the source of illness. In parking garage cases, they may point the finger at another driver or an outside contractor.
Nevada uses comparative negligence. That means your damages can be reduced by your share of fault, and you cannot recover if your fault is greater than the fault of the defendant or combined defendants.
So yes, a casino may try to shift the blame to cut payouts. That does not end your case. It means the evidence matters even more.

In Nevada, a personal injury action is generally subject to a two-year statute of limitations. If you wait too long, the court can dismiss the case even if your injuries are serious.
Even before that deadline, delay can hurt your claim. Surveillance footage may be erased. Witnesses may disappear. The casino may repair the hazard. Medical gaps can also give the insurer room to argue that something else caused your condition. That is why prompt action helps both your health and your legal claim.
You should call a personal injury attorney as soon as possible if the casino injury led to medical treatment, time away from work, surgery, lasting pain, or questions about fault. This matters even more in casino accident cases because casinos often have cameras, private security, multiple ownership layers, and in-house claims systems.
A lawyer can move to preserve footage and records before they disappear. If the case involves gross negligence, catastrophic harm, or a fatal event, early action is even more important.
At THE702FIRM Injury Attorneys, we help people hurt on unsafe property in Las Vegas take action before evidence fades and the casino gets too far ahead of the story. If you were injured at a Las Vegas casino and want to know if you can sue, contact us for a free consultation and an initial case evaluation.