Acute coma in the intensive care unit and persistent disorders of consciousness (DoC) in neuro-rehabilitation are frequent in patients with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy after cardiac arrest (CA), traumatic brain injury, intracranial hemorrhage, or ischemic stroke. Reliable prognostication of long-term neurologic outcomes cannot be made by clinical examination alone in the early phase for many patients, and thus, additional investigations are necessary. Evoked potentials provide inexpensive, real-time, high temporal resolution, bedside, quantifiable information on different sensory pathways into the brain including local and global cortical processing. Short-latency somatosensory evoked potentials can reliably predict poor neurologic long-term outcome in the early phase after CA and are recommended by guidelines as one investigation within an early multimodal assessment. Middle-latency and event-related or cognitive evoked potentials provide information on the integrity of more advanced cortical processing, some closely related to consciousness. This information can help to identify those comatose patients with a good prognosis in the acute phase and help to better understand their precise clinical state and the chances of further recovery in patients with persistent DoC in neuro-rehabilitation. Further studies are necessary to improve the applicability of research findings in the clinical sphere.