In Central Florida, many crashes involve commuters making time-sensitive trips, sudden lane changes, or traffic slowdowns that lead to hard impacts. After the collision, airbag problems often surface in one of a few ways:
- No deployment when you’d expect it after the collision severity.
- Deployment that seems abnormal—including issues like unusually forceful operation.
- Airbag malfunction symptoms that don’t match what you experienced in the past (burns, facial injuries, hearing issues, or other restraint-related trauma).
- Recall-related confusion, where you later learn your vehicle is connected to a safety campaign, but you still need to tie that information to what happened in your crash.
If you suspect an airbag failure, the goal early on isn’t to “prove everything” by guesswork—it’s to document enough to let a lawyer evaluate whether the malfunction is likely tied to a compensable defect.


