6 min read · Alabama Personal Injury · Birmingham & Hoover
You may be able to sue if you slip and fall in a store in Alabama, but only if the store's negligence caused your injury. Generally, you must show the store knew or should have known about a dangerous condition and failed to fix it or warn you. Simply being injured on the property is not enough. Alabama's contributory negligence rule makes these cases challenging, because if the store can show you were even slightly at fault, such as ignoring an obvious hazard, your recovery can be barred entirely.
Slip-and-fall cases sound simple but are among the harder injury claims to win in Alabama. The law does not make a store responsible for every fall on its property; it asks whether the store was actually negligent and whether the customer shared any blame.
This guide explains when a store may be liable for a slip and fall in Alabama and the hurdles these claims face. It is educational and not a substitute for advice about your specific situation.
To recover, you generally must prove the store was negligent: that a dangerous condition existed, that the store knew or should have known about it, and that it failed to remedy the hazard or adequately warn customers. The mere fact that you fell and were hurt does not, by itself, establish liability.
Evidence matters enormously. Photos of the hazard, incident reports, surveillance footage, and witness accounts can help show the store knew or should have known about the danger and had a chance to address it.
Alabama premises liability law considers the visitor's status. A customer in a store is generally an invitee, the category owed the highest duty of reasonable care to keep the premises reasonably safe and to address or warn of known hazards.
Even so, the duty is one of reasonable care, not a guarantee of safety. Open and obvious dangers, in particular, can complicate a claim, because a customer is generally expected to exercise reasonable care for their own safety.
Alabama's contributory negligence rule is especially significant in slip-and-fall cases. If the store can show you were even slightly at fault, for example by not watching where you were walking or ignoring a clearly marked hazard, it can defeat the claim entirely.
This is why prompt documentation and a careful evaluation of the facts are so important. Strong evidence that the store was negligent and that you were acting reasonably is often the difference between a viable claim and a barred one.
Linda slips on a clear spilled liquid in a Birmingham grocery aisle. A worker later admits the spill had been reported about 30 minutes earlier, but no one had cleaned it up or put out a warning sign.
Liability turns on whether the store knew or should have known about the hazard and failed to address it, and the 30-minute-old reported spill is strong evidence that it did. A fall by itself is not enough; the store's notice of the danger is the key that can make the claim viable.
This scenario is a simplified, illustrative hypothetical to explain how the law generally works. It is not a real case and is not a prediction or guarantee of any particular outcome.
Our Birmingham and Hoover personal injury attorneys handle these cases every day. Learn how we can help, or call for a free, confidential consultation. You pay no attorney fees unless we win.
This guide is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. It is not medical advice. Alabama law and its application depend on the specific facts of your situation and can change over time. For advice about your matter, speak with a licensed Alabama attorney.