North Carolina Statutes of Limitations (2026)
A statute of limitations is the deadline by which prosecutors must file criminal charges. After this time period passes, the defendant generally cannot be charged. Here are the statutes of limitations for major crimes in North Carolina.
North Carolina Criminal Statutes of Limitations
| Crime Type | Time Limit |
|---|---|
| Murder / Homicide | None |
| Rape / Sexual Assault | None |
| Felony (General) | None |
| Misdemeanor | 2 years |
| Fraud / Financial Crimes | None |
| Theft / Larceny | None |
| DUI / DWI | 2 years |
| Assault / Battery | None |
North Carolina has NO statute of limitations for felonies — they can be prosecuted at any time
When Can a Statute of Limitations Be Extended in North Carolina?
North Carolina, like most states, allows for tolling (pausing) the statute of limitations clock in specific circumstances:
- Defendant is absent from the state — the clock may pause if the defendant flees or moves out of North Carolina
- DNA evidence — many states have extended or eliminated SOLs when DNA evidence is later discovered
- Victim was a minor — childhood sexual abuse cases often have extended SOLs, with the clock starting when the victim turns 18
- Fraud concealment — if a crime was deliberately concealed, the SOL may not start until the crime is discovered
- Defendant incompetence — if the defendant was declared incompetent
Crimes With No Statute of Limitations in North Carolina
The following crimes in North Carolina can be prosecuted at any time, no matter how long ago they occurred:
- Murder and first-degree homicide
- Rape and sexual assault
- All felonies (North Carolina has no general SOL for felonies)
- Terrorism-related offenses
North Carolina Civil vs. Criminal Statutes of Limitations
It is important to distinguish between criminal statutes of limitations (how long the government has to prosecute you) and civil statutes of limitations (how long an individual has to sue you). The information above relates to criminal statutes only. Civil SOLs in North Carolina vary by the type of claim (personal injury, contract disputes, property damage, etc.) and are governed by separate statutes.
