Yukon operates common-law tort with the standard Andrews cap on non-pecuniary loss. For head & brain claims specifically, the band is built from the Andrews v Grand & Toy non-pecuniary cap framework and then adjusted for Yukon's common-law contributory reduction and any applicable statutory cap.
★ band · Canada federal frame
C$200,000 – Andrews cap
Severe traumatic brain injury
Pecuniary heads add substantially on top
The Canada band is the starting point. Yukon's fault rule and any applicable cap then adjust the figure.
★ YT · statute of limitations
2 years
Limitations Act, S.Y. 2008, c. 21
★ YT · fault rule
Common-law contributory reduction
Contributory-negligence reduction.
★ YT · caps
What caps recovery.
Statutory caps that may bear on a head & brain settlement in Yukon.
Andrews cap
Non-pecuniary loss
~C$430,000+
Andrews trilogy
★ head & brain severity tiers · Canada frame
How the band stratifies.
The Andrews v Grand & Toy non-pecuniary cap stratifies head & brain into the tiers below. Yukon courts apply the same tier structure, adjusted for state-specific factors.
Severity tier
Band
Basis
Concussion / mild TBI
C$30,000 – C$120,000
Reported decisions
Severe traumatic brain injury
C$200,000 – Andrews cap
Pecuniary heads add substantially on top
★ head & brain · neighbouring jurisdictions
Compare to neighbours.
How Yukon's fault rule and limitation period compare to other Canada jurisdictions for head & brain claims.
Each answer is independently coherent and references the relevant statute or authority document.
How much is a head & brain claim worth in Yukon?
Yukon head & brain settlements track the federal Canada band of C$200,000 – Andrews cap, adjusted for Yukon's fault rule (common-law contributory reduction) and any applicable state cap. The position within the band turns on severity, prognosis, recovery time, and the strength of the medical paper trail.
What fault rule applies to head & brain claims in Yukon?
What is the statute of limitations for head & brain claims in Yukon?
2 years. Source: Limitations Act, S.Y. 2008, c. 21. Filing after the period expires generally bars the claim absent a tolling exception.
Do Yukon's damages caps reduce head & brain settlements?
Yes — Yukon applies the following caps that may bear on a head & brain claim: Andrews cap. Caps are applied to the gross award before any fault-allocation reduction.
Does Yukon require no-fault first-party recovery for auto-related head & brain claims?
No. Yukon is a traditional tort jurisdiction; the at-fault driver's insurer is the primary source of recovery for auto-related head & brain claims.
Should I hire a Yukon head & brain attorney?
For all but the most modest claims, yes. Yukon's fault rule and caps materially affect the calculus, and adjusters value represented claims significantly higher. Most Yukon personal injury attorneys work on contingency (33–40% typical), with no fee unless you recover.
Figures on this page are starting points: the Canada band adjusted for Yukon's statutory framework. They are not quotes for any specific case. For representation, consult an attorney admitted in Yukon. See /methodology, /sources, and /disclaimer.