In a commute-heavy area, airbag issues are often discovered through one of these patterns:
- No deployment after an impact: The vehicle appears to have hit hard enough to expect restraint deployment, but the airbag didn’t fire.
- Unexpected deployment that worsened injuries: The airbag deploys in a way that doesn’t match the crash severity or timing, contributing to facial, neck, or hearing-related harm.
- Repairs that “fix” the symptom but not the cause: After repairs, the vehicle’s restraint system may still show signs in documentation (parts replaced, diagnostics, or inspection notes) that suggest a defect.
- Incidents involving commuter traffic and sudden braking: Low-to-moderate speed crashes can still produce restraint-system problems depending on sensor input and control logic.
Even when the accident itself feels straightforward, airbag malfunction cases hinge on technical facts—what the restraint system did, what it was designed to do, and how that connects to your documented injuries.


