Ohio PFAS Lawsuit Overview
If you live in Ohio and were diagnosed with kidney cancer, testicular cancer, thyroid disease, ulcerative colitis, or another PFAS-linked condition after drinking contaminated water or experiencing occupational AFFF exposure, you may be eligible to file a PFAS personal injury claim.
PFAS personal injury cases can be filed in federal courts and may be consolidated in the AFFF MDL 2873 in the District of South Carolina, regardless of where in Ohio you live. You do not need to travel — your attorney handles filing and proceedings on your behalf.
2 Years
Discovery Rule May Apply
Ohio Statute of Limitations Details
Ohio generally applies a 2-year limitations period for bodily injury actions, with product-liability accrual details varying by claim facts.
PFAS Contamination in Ohio
Ohio has confirmed PFAS contamination in water supplies through EPA UCMR 5 monitoring data. Sources of PFAS contamination in Ohio may include:
- Municipal water systems serving Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati and surrounding communities that have detected PFAS above EPA limits
- Military installations in Ohio where AFFF firefighting foam was used in training and emergency response
- Industrial facilities that manufactured or used PFAS chemicals
- Agricultural areas where PFAS-containing biosolids were applied to farmland
To confirm PFAS contamination in your specific water system, search the EPA UCMR 5 database using your water system name or zip code. Your water utility is also required to publish annual Consumer Confidence Reports that must disclose PFAS testing results.
Who Qualifies for a PFAS Claim in Ohio?
To file a PFAS personal injury claim as a Ohio resident, you generally need:
- Documented exposure to PFAS — through confirmed contaminated municipal water, military base AFFF exposure, firefighting occupational exposure, or another documented source
- A diagnosis of a PFAS-linked condition: kidney cancer, testicular cancer, thyroid cancer, thyroid disease, bladder cancer, ulcerative colitis, high cholesterol (diagnosed), or another qualifying condition
- Your condition developed during or after your PFAS exposure period
- Your claim is within Ohio's 2-year statute of limitations window
How the PFAS MDL Works for Ohio Residents
Most PFAS personal injury cases involving AFFF foam are part of MDL 2873 in the District of South Carolina. This means your case is coordinated with thousands of similar cases nationwide for efficiency — but your claim remains individual. Bellwether trials in the MDL test how juries respond to the evidence, which typically drives settlement negotiations that benefit all plaintiffs.
For non-AFFF PFAS cases (e.g., municipal water contamination from industrial sources), cases may be filed in state court in Ohio or federal court depending on the defendants and facts.
Finding a PFAS Attorney in Ohio
You don't necessarily need to hire a Ohio-based attorney for a PFAS claim — mass tort attorneys often practice nationally. However, a local attorney understands Ohio state law nuances that affect your claim. Options for finding a PFAS attorney:
- Submit our free case review form to be matched with an attorney in our network
- Contact the Ohio State Bar lawyer referral service
- Search for mass tort or environmental litigation attorneys in Ohio