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The 10 Biggest Million Dollar Slip and Fall Settlements in the U.S.

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October 13, 2025Elvis Goren
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    4분마다 한 번씩,
    누군가의 삶에 닿습니다.

    DK Law 에서는 평균 4분마다 사고 상담 요청이 들어옵니다. 그 신뢰가 저희에게는 큰 힘이자, 끊임없이 나아가게 하는 이유입니다.

    Last updated: May 2026

    Most people think million-dollar slip and fall cases are a thing of movies. A fairytale. The fact is that they are very real. While average injury settlement payouts land between $10,000 and $50,000, some can fetch millions.

    When Pablo Scipione slipped on ice at a California railyard, he thought he’d be back at work the next day. But a microfracture in his foot turned into complex regional pain syndrome. A neurological nightmare. And one that left him permanently disabled. In May 2024, a Los Angeles County jury awarded him $58.4 million, the largest slip and fall verdict in U.S. history.

    And he’s not alone. Verdicts in slip and fall cases are climbing. The median U.S. verdict over $10 million hit roughly $51 million in 2024, with premises liability driving a meaningful chunk of that growth.

    Below are the 10 biggest million-dollar slip and fall settlements and verdicts in the country. If you’ve been hurt in a fall on someone else’s property, our slip and fall lawyers can review your case for free.

    #CaseAmount
    1Scipione (Kinkisharyo)$58.36M
    2Choto (McDonald’s)$18.79M
    3Gustafsson (Manhole)$18M
    4Hendrickson (Lowe’s)$16.4M
    5Fenton (Cosmopolitan)$15M
    6Virginia Ice$12.2M
    7Walmart Colorado Grease$10M
    8Walmart Alabama Pallet$7.5M
    9Marron (Food 4 Less)$5.34M
    10Matt Taylor / DK Law$5M

    $58.36 Million: The Railyard Worker Who Never Recovered

    We mentioned Pablo already. He was doing electrical repairs on top of a train car in Palmdale when he hit ice. The fall itself seemed minor. Just a microfracture to his left foot. He even went back to work the next day.

    But something went wrong. The fracture triggered Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, a condition where your nervous system basically turns against you. Constant, burning pain that never stops. No cure. No relief. The Los Angeles jury heard how employees had complained repeatedly about the poor lighting at Kinkisharyo’s facility, but management ignored them. That’s why they added $4.2 million in punitive damages on top of the $54.2 million compensatory award.

    $18.79 Million: The McDonald’s Fall That Destroyed a Spine

    Jonathan Choto already had back problems from a 2015 work injury. He’d had two surgeries and was managing.

    Then in 2018, he slipped on liquid leaking from a garbage bag at a Lomita McDonald’s. The 28-year-old’s existing injury exploded into something far worse. Now he needed a permanent spinal cord stimulator just to function.

    The Santa Monica jury awarded $16 million just for future pain and suffering. Because when you’re 28 and facing a lifetime of agony, that’s what it costs.

    $18 Million: The Medical Student Who Fell Into Darkness

    Marcus Gustafsson was walking near 19th and Walnut in Philadelphia when he fell 18 feet through an open manhole. A University of Pennsylvania medical student with his whole career ahead of him.

    The spinal cord injuries ended everything. No more medical career. No more independence. Trigen-Philadelphia Energy allegedly knew for a decade that homeless people were removing manhole covers for shelter. They did nothing about it.

    The jury originally awarded $85 million, but a pre-trial agreement capped it at $18 million. Still one of the largest settlements for a premises liability case.

    $16.4 Million: The Lowe’s Shopper Who Lost Her Senses

    Kelly Hendrickson was 41, shopping for palm trees at a Las Vegas Lowe’s. She slipped on water and fractured her skull, and permanently lost her taste and smell.

    Interestingly enough, 30 people had been injured at Lowe’s stores in Clark County over five years. Three at the exact same location where Hendrickson fell. From a legal perspective, it may be argued that Lowe’s knew. They just didn’t fix it.

    The jury found Lowe’s 80% responsible, reducing the final award to about $13.1 million. But the message was clear: ignore safety patterns, pay the price.

    $15 Million: The Vegas Cocktail That Took Down the Cosmopolitan

    Deborah Fenton was in Vegas for a private event at the Cosmopolitan’s Chandelier Bar. A Bakersfield real estate agent, just out for a nice night. Then someone dropped a glass.

    Fenton slipped on the spilled drink and broken glass in 2021. The whole thing was on the casino’s surveillance video. What looked like a routine fall turned into Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, the same nerve condition that ruined Pablo Scipione’s life on top of the railcar.

    The defense offered $2.75 million. Fenton’s team wanted $12 million. The Clark County jury heard the case, watched the video, and deliberated for an hour and fifteen minutes.

    They came back with $15 million. One million for medical bills. Fourteen million for what she lost (past, present, and future). Both the Cosmopolitan’s operator and MGM Resorts were on the hook.

    $12.2 Million: The Ice Slip

    A Virginia woman slipped on ice outside a convenience store. Multiple back surgeries followed. The claim is that the store owner knew about the ice and did nothing to clear it.

    $12.2 million. Because when you own a business, keeping your walkways safe isn’t optional.

    $10 Million: Walmart’s Grease Problem

    A Colorado woman slipped on a grease spill in Walmart. The jury initially awarded $15 million, but state damage caps reduced it to just over $10 million.

    Even with the reduction, it sends a message: clean up your spills or pay up.

    $7.5 Million: The Hidden Pallet Trap

    An Alabama man was shopping at Walmart when he tripped over a wooden pallet hidden under a watermelon display. The jury hit Walmart with $5 million in punitive damages on top of $2.5 million in compensatory damages.

    Why the huge punitive award? Because hiding hazards under displays is inexcusable.

    $5.34 Million: When Food 4 Less Tripped Over Its Own Rules

    Dolores Marron was shopping at a Food 4 Less in Los Angeles when she tripped over a pallet display. Standard premises liability scenario. Except this one came with a twist: the pallet was stacked in front of a beer cooler in a way that violated Kroger’s own written safety policies.

    Their own rules. Ignored.

    Marron’s lumbar spine took the hit. The injury progressed into adjacent-segment disease, which is what happens when one bad disc forces the next one to give out, too. She needed a two-level lumbar spinal fusion just to walk normally again.

    The jury saw the policy violations. The jury saw the surgical scars. They returned $5.34 million.

    When companies write safety rules, they’re admitting what could go wrong. When they ignore those same rules, they’re admitting they didn’t care.

    $5 Million: DK Law’s Pre-Existing Condition Victory

    DK Law attorney Matt Taylor landed a $5 million settlement for someone with a pre-existing condition. An exacerbation of a congenital issue, technically.

    Let us explain why this matters.

    Insurance adjusters love pre-existing conditions. The second they see anything in your medical history (bad back, old surgery, genetic anything), they act like they just won the lottery. “Oh, you had back problems before? Well then, this fall didn’t really hurt you. Here’s $500. Go away.”

    Except that’s not how bodies work. Or law, actually.

    DK Law took a case most lawyers would settle for peanuts. The client had a congenital condition, and the insurance company was playing the pre-existing condition card. Yet, Matt Taylor turned it into a $5 million settlement—one of the biggest slip and fall cases in California.

    What Makes a Slip and Fall Worth Millions?

    Not every fall leads to a massive settlement. The difference comes down to a few brutal realities.

    • Permanent damage drives value. Temporary injuries hurt, but they heal. When someone develops complex regional pain syndrome or becomes paralyzed, they’re facing decades of medical bills, lost wages, and suffering. Courts recognize that lifetime burden requires lifetime compensation.
    • Corporate negligence multiplies awards. When businesses ignore known hazards, like Kinkisharyo ignoring safety complaints or Lowe’s dismissing injury patterns. Juries add punitive damages. These aren’t just compensation; they’re punishment designed to force change.
    • Age and career matter. A medical student losing his career generates higher damages than someone near retirement. Young victims have more years of lost earnings ahead. The math is cold but necessary.
    • Location affects everything. California and Nevada juries consistently award higher damages in slip and fall cases. Los Angeles County produced three of the top settlements. Some states cap damages, meaning the Colorado Walmart case would’ve stayed at $15 million without state limits.

    Which Slip and Fall Injuries Command Top Dollar?

    1. Traumatic Brain Injuries: $500K to $5 Million

    외상성 뇌 손상 are invisible destroyers. Kelly Hendrickson’s permanent loss of taste and smell might sound minor until you realize she can’t smell smoke in a fire or taste spoiled food. TBI victims often face personality changes, cognitive problems, and depression that last forever.

    2. Spinal Cord Damage: $1 Million to $10 Million

    척추 부상 escalate fast. Jonathan Choto went from managing his condition to needing a permanent spinal stimulator. Marcus Gustafsson went from future doctor to permanent patient. Partial paralysis can cost millions in lifetime care.

    3. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome: $1 Million to $58 Million

    CRPS is a chronic pain condition that affects your physical and mental health. Your nervous system misfires constantly, creating burning pain that painkillers can’t touch. Pablo Scipione’s $58.36 million verdict reflects the reality that CRPS victims often can’t work, can’t sleep, and can’t find relief.

    4. Hip Fractures in Elderly Victims: $100K to $1 Million

    Don’t dismiss hip fractures as “just broken bones.” For elderly victims, hip fractures carry a 30% mortality rate within a year. Those who survive often lose independence permanently. Settlements recognize both the medical crisis and dignity loss.

    Slip and Fall Settlement FAQs

    What is the largest slip and fall settlement in U.S. history?

    The largest known slip and fall verdict in U.S. history is $58.36 million, awarded in May 2024 by a Los Angeles County jury to Pablo Scipione. He slipped on ice at the Kinkisharyo International railcar facility in Palmdale, California, suffered a microfracture that triggered Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, and required multiple surgeries. The award broke the previous record by more than $40 million.

    How much can you get from a slip and fall settlement that requires surgery?

    Slip and fall cases involving surgery typically range from several hundred thousand dollars to several million, depending on the type of surgery, severity of injury, and impact on your future ability to work. Cases involving spinal fusion, joint replacement, or multiple surgeries — like the $5.34 million Marron v. Food 4 Less verdict — sit at the top end of that range. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

    What is the average settlement for a slip and fall on ice?

    There’s no clean “average” for ice-related slip and fall settlements. The amount depends on injury severity, comparative fault, and how long the property owner left the hazard untreated. The single largest U.S. slip and fall verdict — $58.36 million — involved water and ice on a commercial worksite. Most ice cases settle for far less; those requiring surgery typically command the highest awards.

    Getting Justice After a Catastrophic Fall

    These settlements shock people because we’ve been trained to think of falls as minor accidents. They’re not. When businesses ignore safety and someone’s life is destroyed, California law allows for compensation that matches the devastation.

    If you’re dealing with a serious slip and fall injury in California, DK Law for a free consultation about your rights and potential case value.

    About the Author

    Elvis Goren

    Elvis Goren is the Organic Growth Manager at DK Law, bringing over a decade of content and SEO expertise from Silicon Valley startups to the legal industry. He champions a human-first approach to legal content, crafting fun and engaging resources that make complex injury law topics resonate with everyday readers while driving meaningful organic growth.

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