Negligent Security · Premises Crime Lawsuits

Hotel & Motel Negligent Security Lawsuits

If you were assaulted, robbed, or shot at a hotel or motel that failed to provide reasonable security — broken door locks, no surveillance, unscreened access — you may be able to sue the hotel. Guests are owed a duty of reasonable safety, and hotels that ignore known risks can be held liable.

Crime victim attorney Michael A. Haggard
$102.7M record verdict

A hotel’s duty to its guests

Hotels and motels invite paying guests to sleep on their property and owe a clear duty to provide reasonable security. Guests reasonably expect working locks, controlled access, and a safe environment. When a hotel fails to deliver that and a guest is harmed, the hotel can be held responsible.

Common hotel and motel security failures

  • Defective or easily bypassed room door locks and key-card systems
  • No working surveillance in lobbies, hallways, stairwells, or lots
  • Uncontrolled access that lets non-guests roam freely
  • No security staff at properties with a known crime problem
  • Poorly lit parking areas and exterior walkways
  • Ignoring prior assaults, robberies, or drug activity on site

Who can be held responsible?

Liability can extend to the hotel owner, the management company, and the franchise or brand operator depending on how the property is run — as well as any security contractor.

What a claim can recover

Compensation can include medical care, lost income, and the trauma of being attacked where you should have been safe. Fatal incidents can support a wrongful-death claim. No fee unless we win.

Frequently asked questions

Can I sue a hotel if my room was broken into and I was assaulted?

Often, yes. A faulty lock or key-card system, or uncontrolled access that let an intruder reach your room, can support a negligent-security claim against the hotel.

Does it matter if it was a budget motel or a major chain?

No — the duty to provide reasonable security applies to both. What matters is whether the property ignored foreseeable risk. Major brands may also bring additional responsible parties into the case.

What does it cost to pursue a hotel?

Nothing up front. We work on contingency, so there are no attorney's fees unless we recover for you.