In Vermont, the statute of limitations for defamation is 3 years. Enter the date the incident happened to estimate your exact filing deadline, then read how the clock starts and what can change it.
Defamation (libel / slander) in Vermont
3 years to file
Enter the date of the incident to estimate the filing deadline and see how long you have left.
A defamation claim addresses false statements of fact that injure your reputation — libel when written or published, slander when spoken. It carries one of the shortest limitations periods of any civil claim in nearly every state, which makes acting quickly essential.
The general limitation period in Vermont for this kind of claim is 3 years. May be paused (tolled) while the claimant is a minor or legally incapacitated, or under the discovery rule until the injury is or should have been discovered. Miss it and a Vermont court will almost certainly dismiss the case on a motion, regardless of how strong the underlying facts are — which is why the date matters as much as the merits.
The clock generally starts on the date the statement was first published or spoken. Most states follow the single-publication rule: a mass publication (a news article, a social post) triggers one clock at first publication, and later views or shares do not restart it.
For a concrete example: A false review accusing you of fraud is posted online. The clock typically runs from the original post date, not from each new person who reads it. The calculator above applies the 3 years Vermont window to your incident date, but the genuine accrual date can differ from the day the harm occurred, so treat the result as a planning estimate rather than a guarantee.
A substantial later republication to a new audience can start a fresh clock. The discovery rule is applied narrowly and only in limited circumstances, such as a confidential statement the plaintiff could not have known about. Some states distinguish libel from slander with different periods.
Because each of these doctrines can move the deadline in either direction, two people with the same defamation facts can end up with very different real deadlines. A short consultation early on is the only reliable way to know which exceptions apply to you in Vermont.
Vermont’s 3 years window for defamation is longer than the national median of 1 year across all 51 jurisdictions we track. Ranked from the most time to the least, Vermont sits at number 4 of 51 for this claim — relatively generous to claimants. For comparison, Massachusetts gives the most time (3 years) and Wyoming the least (1 year). Limitation periods are tied to where the claim arose, not where you live, so if your defamation facts touch more than one state, confirm which state’s law actually governs before you rely on the Vermont number.
Preserve the exact statement with screenshots, dates, URLs, and witnesses before it is deleted. Given the short window and the single-publication rule, defamation claims must move fast — often within a year of first publication.
See all Vermont statute-of-limitations periods in one table →