In practice, defective airbag claims usually start with patterns people recognize after the fact—especially when the crash severity seems inconsistent with what the restraint system did.
Common scenarios include:
- No airbag deployment despite a crash that should have triggered the system.
- Unexpected deployment timing, such as deployment that occurred when it shouldn’t have.
- Abnormal deployment force, where the restraint system behaves in a way that increases injury risk.
- Component-related failures, including issues tied to sensors or the inflator system.
If you were injured—whether it involved facial trauma, burns, hearing issues, or other restraint-related harm—your medical records will be the foundation. The legal side then focuses on connecting the malfunction to the injury and identifying the responsible parties.


