Gulf Shores traffic patterns and seasonal travel can affect what evidence survives—and what insurers argue about later.
- Tourist-heavy roads and quick scene changes: After a crash, vehicles are often moved, lanes reopened, and witnesses disperse—making it harder to reconstruct what happened.
- Heat, humidity, and repairs done fast: Vehicles get repaired quickly so they can be driven again, but early repairs may remove or cover up parts that later matter in an airbag defect investigation.
- Different crash locations: A collision on a busy corridor versus a quieter residential street can change what cameras, patrol logs, and witness details are available.
The takeaway: if an airbag problem is suspected, acting promptly to preserve information can make the difference between a claim that has clear support and one that becomes a “he said, she said” dispute.


