Swimming Pool Accidents: Lifeguard Distraction and Negligence

If you or a family member has been injured in a drowning or near-drowning at a Las Vegas pool, resort, dayclub, or water park, you may be wondering whether you have a legal claim—especially if a lifeguard was on duty.

Las Vegas has more pools per capita than almost anywhere in the country. From massive resort aquatic complexes to dayclubs packed with thousands of revelers, swimming is central to our tourism economy. But when an accident occurs at a staffed pool, property owners often rush to blame the victim.

They will argue that you “Assumed the Risk” by getting in the water. They will claim that swimming is inherently dangerous.

This is a standard defense strategy, but in cases of lifeguard negligence, it is legally flawed.

When a hotel or water park provides a lifeguard, they voluntarily assume a specific legal duty to protect you. If that lifeguard is distracted—texting, talking to friends, or simply “zoning out”—they have breached that duty. You did not assume the risk of a negligent lifeguard.

The Myth of “Assumption of Risk”

In Nevada personal injury law, “Assumption of Risk” is a defense used to bar recovery. The argument is simple: you knew water was dangerous, so you can’t sue if you drown.

However, this defense generally applies to inherent risks (like a baseball player getting hit by a pitch). It does not apply to “secondary” risks created by the venue’s negligence.

  • Primary Risk (Assumed): You might swallow water or get tired while swimming.
  • Secondary Risk (NOT Assumed): A lifeguard failing to scan their zone for 5 minutes because they were flirting with a guest.

These are hypothetical scenarios for illustrative purposes. Actual case outcomes depend on specific facts, evidence, and circumstances.

If we can prove the lifeguard failed to meet the industry standard of care, the “Assumption of Risk” defense often crumbles.

Who can be held liable

Drowning cases often involve multiple responsible parties:

  • The lifeguard who failed to perform their duties
  • The pool management company responsible for training, staffing, and supervision
  • The hotel or resort as property owner (premises liability)
  • Third-party staffing agencies that provide contract lifeguards
  • Event organizers for private pool parties or dayclub events

In most cases, you would sue the property owner and management company rather than the individual lifeguard, because employers are generally responsible for employee negligence—and they have insurance.

The Industry Standard: The 10/20 Rule

To prove negligence, we must define what a “reasonable” lifeguard should have done. Many high-end Vegas resorts and water parks use Ellis & Associates certification, which requires compliance with the 10/20 Protection Rule. This is a more rigorous standard than basic Red Cross or YMCA certification, which is why major Strip properties often use it.

  • 10 Seconds: The lifeguard must be able to scan their entire zone and recognize a guest in distress within 10 seconds.
  • 20 Seconds: The lifeguard must be able to reach the victim and begin rendering aid within 20 seconds.

Not all pools use this standard. The American Red Cross, YMCA, and other certifying bodies have different protocols. But Ellis & Associates certification is common at major Las Vegas resorts and water parks precisely because it sets a higher, measurable bar. If the facility advertises Ellis-certified lifeguards, they have agreed to meet this standard—and we can hold them to it.

If a lifeguard takes 60 seconds to notice a drowning child because they were scanning too slowly or staring at a specific area, they have failed this standard. This is not “bad luck”; it is negligence.

How we prove lifeguard negligence in Las Vegas pool cases

Lifeguarding is monotonous. In a busy Vegas “dayclub” with loud music and hundreds of people, maintaining focus is difficult. Negligence often happens when guards suffer from “zone fatigue” or succumb to distractions.

We look for three specific pieces of evidence to prove this:

1. The Surveillance “Audit”

Las Vegas pools have extensive camera coverage. We don’t just look for the accident; we look at the 30 minutes prior.

  • The Evidence: We review the footage to count the lifeguard’s head movements.
  • The Argument: A diligent guard moves their head constantly to scan the zone. A negligent guard stares in one direction (tunnel vision) or looks down (phone usage/distraction).

2. The Rotation Log

Industry standards typically require lifeguards to rotate stations every 20-30 minutes to prevent mental fatigue.

  • The Evidence: We pull the “Rotation Log” or “Break Sheet.”
  • The Argument: If the guard who missed your accident had been sitting in the same chair for 90 minutes in 100-degree heat, the management is liable for setting them up to fail.

3. Staffing ratios and the 2,000 square foot rule

Under SNHD regulations, any pool with 2,000 or more square feet of surface area must have lifeguards. Where lifeguards are required, there must be at least one for every 2,000 square feet of water surface.

  • The Evidence: We measure the pool area and compare it to the staffing roster for that day.
  • The Argument: If a 10,000 square foot resort pool only had three guards on duty when regulations required five, the facility was understaffed, making effective surveillance impossible. Understaffing is a management decision—not bad luck.

The “Dayclub” Factor: Alcohol and Liability

Vegas dayclubs present a unique liability scenario. These venues serve alcohol to swimmers, which increases the risk of drowning. Defense attorneys will argue that an intoxicated guest is 100% at fault for their own drowning.

However, the venue knows they are serving alcohol. This increases their duty of care. If a venue profits from serving drinks in a pool, their lifeguards must be hyper-vigilant for signs of impairment or distress. They cannot serve you tequila shots and then claim they were “shocked” you had trouble swimming.

What if I was partially at fault?

Nevada follows a “modified comparative negligence” rule (NRS 41.141). You can still recover compensation as long as you were not more than 50% at fault for your own injuries. Your payout is reduced by your percentage of fault.

This matters in pool cases. If you had been drinking at a dayclub, the defense will argue you contributed to your own drowning. But intoxication does not automatically bar recovery. The question is whether the lifeguard’s negligence was also a cause of your injuries—and whether your fault exceeded 50%.

A lifeguard who fails to scan their zone for two minutes while you struggle underwater has still breached their duty, regardless of your blood alcohol level.

How to evaluate your case

Not every pool accident involves lifeguard negligence. Here’s how to assess whether you may have a claim:

Signs of a strong case:

  • Lifeguard was visibly distracted (phone, conversation, looking away from water)
  • Significant delay before anyone responded to distress
  • Pool was understaffed for its size or crowd level
  • No lifeguard rotation occurred for extended periods
  • Surveillance footage shows guard inattention
  • Other swimmers or witnesses noticed the guard wasn’t watching

Factors that may complicate your case:

  • No witnesses to lifeguard behavior before the incident
  • Lifeguard responded immediately but rescue was unsuccessful
  • Severe intoxication on your part
  • You signed a liability waiver upon entry
  • The pool was marked “No Lifeguard on Duty”

Even with complicating factors, you may still have a viable claim. The key question is whether the lifeguard or facility breached their duty of care.

A note on liability waivers

Many Vegas pools and dayclubs require guests to sign waivers before entry. While these documents provide some legal protection for the venue, they generally cannot shield a business from liability for gross negligence or reckless conduct.

A lifeguard who ignores a drowning victim while scrolling their phone isn’t protected by a waiver you signed at check-in. Neither is a resort that knowingly understaffs its pool during a busy holiday weekend.

If you signed a waiver, don’t assume your case is dead. The waiver’s enforceability depends on the specific facts—and gross negligence typically falls outside what any waiver can excuse.

Watch the Clock: Statute of Limitations

As with other injury claims, Nevada generally enforces a two-year statute of limitations for swimming pool accidents (NRS 11.190). However, the timeline for evidence is much shorter.

  • Video footage at casinos is often overwritten in 7-14 days.
  • Lifeguard logs may be discarded or “lost” if not immediately requested.

What to Do After a Pool Accident

  1. Demand an Incident Report: Ensure the pool manager documents the event. Do not let them classify a near-drowning as “heat exhaustion.”
  2. Identify Witnesses: Other guests in the pool are your best witnesses. Did they see the lifeguard looking at their phone? Did they see the victim struggling while the guard did nothing?
  3. Preserve Evidence: Take photos of the pool conditions. Was it overcrowded? Was the water cloudy (preventing the guard from seeing the bottom)?
  4. Do NOT give a recorded statement to the hotel’s insurance company without consulting an attorney. Insurers will contact you quickly—sometimes within hours. They may ask leading questions designed to minimize your claim or establish your fault. Politely decline until you have legal guidance.
  5. Be cautious of early settlement offers. Insurance companies sometimes offer quick payments before you understand the full extent of your injuries. Brain injuries from near-drowning, for example, may not manifest symptoms for days or weeks.

What compensation may be available

If you can prove lifeguard negligence caused your injuries, potential compensation may include:

  • Medical expenses: Emergency care, hospitalization, rehabilitation, ongoing treatment
  • Lost wages: Time missed from work during recovery
  • Pain and suffering: Physical pain and emotional distress
  • Long-term care: For brain injuries or permanent disabilities from oxygen deprivation
  • Wrongful death damages: Funeral costs, loss of financial support, and loss of companionship if a family member died

The value of any case depends on injury severity, evidence strength, and the specific circumstances.

Get a free case evaluation

Drowning cases are complex because they often rely on proving what didn’t happen—the rescue that should have occurred. You need an attorney who understands the difference between a Red Cross certification and the more rigorous standards used by top Vegas resorts.

With 40+ years of experience handling injury cases in Las Vegas, Jack Bernstein understands the specific challenges of resort pool and dayclub accidents—including how to defeat assumption of risk defenses and fight back when insurers try to blame the victim for drinking. If a hotel or their insurance company is pushing back on your claim, Jack can evaluate whether you have a case.

Contact Jack Bernstein Injury Lawyers for a free consultation: (702) 633-3333.

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