Kentucky Premises Liability

Slip and Fall on Ice Lawyers

If you slipped on ice at a store, parking lot, apartment complex, or any property in Kentucky, the owner may owe you full compensation for your injuries. Call Sam Aguiar Injury Lawyers today.

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Kentucky winters bring black ice, freezing rain, and packed snow to parking lots, sidewalks, building entrances, and apartment walkways across the state. NOAA records show Kentucky has experienced 12 billion-dollar winter storm events since 1980, and icy conditions send thousands of Kentuckians to emergency rooms each season. When property owners fail to clear ice and snow after a storm passes, the law holds them responsible for the injuries that result. Sam Aguiar Injury Lawyers represents people hurt in ice and snow slip and fall accidents across Louisville, Lexington, and the rest of Kentucky, putting more money in their pockets through the Bigger Share Guarantee®.

Kentucky Property Owner Duty: What the Law Requires

Kentucky premises liability law requires property owners and occupants to keep their premises in a reasonably safe condition for anyone lawfully on the property. For decades, many Kentucky courts treated ice and snow as an “open and obvious” hazard that shielded property owners from liability. That changed with the Kentucky Supreme Court’s 2015 decision in Carter v. Bullitt Host, LLC. The court ruled that an open-and-obvious icy condition does not automatically erase a property owner’s duty of care. Instead, fault is allocated under Kentucky’s pure comparative fault system.

KRS 411.182 governs how fault is divided in all tort actions in Kentucky, including premises liability cases. Under this statute, a jury assigns a percentage of fault to each party. If a property owner is found 80% at fault and you are found 20% at fault, your recovery is reduced by your share. You can still recover even if you bear partial responsibility. Insurance companies exploit this rule aggressively, arguing that victims chose the wrong footwear, ignored warning signs, or simply should have seen the ice. Building a case with strong evidence is critical to pushing back against those arguments.

The duty to act generally begins after the storm ends. Property owners are not expected to keep walkways perfectly clear while freezing rain is actively falling. However, once precipitation stops, the clock starts. Louisville and Lexington both have local ordinances requiring sidewalk clearance within a set window after a storm. Commercial owners face the highest standard because they invite the public onto their premises for profit.

Commercial Properties: Parking Lots, Sidewalks, and Store Entrances

Grocery stores, retailers, restaurants, hotels, and office parks invite the public onto their premises for commercial gain. Kentucky law holds them to the highest duty of care. That means proactive monitoring, not waiting for a customer to report ice. A business that knows its shaded north-facing entrance freezes every time temperatures drop has a legal obligation to preemptively salt or sand that area. Ignorance is not a defense when the hazard was predictable.

Parking lot ice is among the most common and most serious scenarios. Poorly drained lots create sheets of black ice overnight when melting snow refreezes after sunset. Property managers who shovel snow improperly, piling it where it will melt and drain across a walking path, may actually create a new hazard and bear liability for it. A store entrance with overhead drainage that channels melt water directly onto the door threshold is a predictable trap that courts have found actionable.

Landlord Liability for Ice at Apartment and Rental Properties

Landlords at multi-unit apartment complexes are responsible for maintaining common areas, including shared parking lots, sidewalks connecting buildings, stairwells, and building entrances. A landlord who receives a complaint about uncleared ice in the parking lot and takes no action for several days is in a different legal position than one who responds promptly. The length of time the hazard existed before the fall is one of the most important facts in any premises liability case.

In single-family home rentals, lease agreements sometimes shift maintenance duties to tenants. Whether the landlord or tenant bears responsibility for ice removal depends on the specific lease terms. If a landlord contracts with a third-party snow removal company that does the job carelessly, both the landlord and the contractor may face liability for a resulting injury. Our team reviews lease agreements, contracts, and maintenance records to identify every party who bears responsibility.

Common Ice Fall Injuries in Kentucky

Ice fall injuries are among the most severe of all premises liability cases because victims fall abruptly with no time to brace. The CDC reports nearly 319,000 older adults are hospitalized for hip fractures each year, with falls as the cause in roughly 88% of cases. Even younger, healthier people suffer serious trauma from sudden falls on hard, slippery surfaces.

Hip Fractures

Wrist Fractures

Traumatic Brain Injuries

Spinal Injuries

Shoulder Injuries

Knee & Ankle Injuries

Falls are also the most common cause of traumatic brain injuries in the United States. A head strike on a frozen parking lot or icy sidewalk can produce a concussion, a subdural hematoma, or worse. Many victims are discharged from the emergency room without realizing the full extent of their brain injury, only to develop symptoms, including memory problems, chronic headaches, and cognitive changes, in the weeks that follow. See our brain injury practice page for more on these cases.

Preserving Evidence After an Ice Fall in Kentucky

Ice melts. Evidence disappears. The steps you take in the hours after a slip and fall on ice determine how much evidence your legal team has to work with. Property owners and their insurers act quickly after a serious fall, sometimes salting and clearing the area within minutes of the incident to alter the scene.

  1. Photograph the ice immediately. Take pictures of the exact location where you fell, the surrounding area, any drainage issues, and any visible lack of salt or sand. Photograph from multiple angles before anything is moved or treated.
  2. Report the incident in writing. Tell the property manager or store manager what happened and ask for a written incident report. Keep a copy. Your verbal report alone may be mischaracterized later.
  3. Get the weather records. NOAA’s Storm Events Database and local weather service records document exactly when the storm ended and what temperature conditions existed before and after your fall. This data proves how long the property owner had to address the ice.
  4. Seek medical attention that same day. Delay gives the property owner’s insurer reason to argue your injuries were not caused by the fall. Go to the emergency room or urgent care the same day, even if you feel you can walk it off.
  5. Call Sam Aguiar Injury Lawyers. We preserve surveillance footage, subpoena maintenance records, and obtain prior complaint histories before evidence is lost. You focus on getting better. We’ll handle everything else.

Hurt in a Slip and Fall on Ice?

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sue a property owner for my slip and fall on ice in Kentucky? +
Yes, in many cases. The Kentucky Supreme Court’s ruling in Carter v. Bullitt Host, LLC established that property owners cannot escape liability simply because ice was visible. The key questions are whether the owner acted reasonably given the conditions, how long they had to address the hazard after the storm ended, and whether their failure to act caused your injury.
What if the ice was visible and I could see it before I fell? +
Visible ice does not automatically bar your claim under Kentucky law. Under KRS 411.182, fault is divided proportionally between all parties. A court considers whether you acted reasonably and whether the property owner acted reasonably. If you had no safe alternative route, such as an icy path that was the only way into a store, the owner’s share of fault increases significantly.
What about black ice? Can I still recover if the ice was invisible? +
Black ice cases are often strong premises liability claims. Kentucky courts look at whether the property owner had reason to know that area was prone to black ice formation, such as a north-facing lot that freezes every night when temperatures drop. A property owner who knows a location creates black ice but fails to preemptively salt it faces significant liability, even if neither party could see the hazard.
Can I recover if I fell on a public sidewalk or city-maintained road? +
Claims against government entities in Kentucky are complicated by sovereign immunity. Cities and counties are generally immune from many tort claims under Kentucky law, but there are exceptions, particularly when a governmental body was performing a proprietary rather than governmental function, or when a ministerial duty was clearly neglected. Claims against public entities also require strict notice deadlines. Contact us quickly if a government entity may be involved.
How long do I have to file a claim after a slip and fall on ice in Kentucky? +
Kentucky’s personal injury statute of limitations is one year from the date of injury under KRS 413.140. This is one of the shortest deadlines in the country. Missing it ends your ability to recover. Acting quickly also protects evidence: surveillance footage is often overwritten within days, and ice conditions change the moment temperatures rise. Do not wait.
What types of compensation can I recover after an ice fall injury? +
A successful premises liability claim in Kentucky can recover medical bills (past and future), lost income, reduced earning capacity, physical pain, emotional suffering, and costs of ongoing care or rehabilitation. Hip fractures and traumatic brain injuries often involve months of surgery, physical therapy, and long-term limitations that drive total losses well above initial medical costs. Your recovery should reflect the full impact on your life.
My landlord never salted the apartment parking lot and I fell. What are my options? +
Kentucky law requires landlords at multi-unit properties to maintain common areas in a reasonably safe condition. A parking lot that remained icy for days without treatment is a strong indication of negligence. The outcome depends on the specific lease terms, the length of time the ice existed, and whether the landlord had actual or constructive knowledge of the condition. We review leases, maintenance logs, and prior complaint records to build the strongest possible case.
What is the Bigger Share Guarantee®? +
The Bigger Share Guarantee® means you take home more of your settlement than you would at other firms. Our flat-fee structure keeps more money in your pocket. There is $0 out-of-pocket cost to you, ever. You pay nothing unless we recover for you, and when we do, you get more. Learn more on our personal injury practice page.

You Focus on Getting Better. We’ll Handle Everything Else.

Serving Louisville, Lexington, and all of Kentucky. Call us 24/7 after an ice fall injury.