In suburban driving conditions, many people assume an airbag “should have worked” when the crash looks serious. But with today’s restraint systems, deployment can depend on complex sensor inputs and vehicle-specific design.
In Oviedo, where residents commonly drive daily for school, work, and errands, these situations show up often:
- Low-speed or partial-impact collisions that still cause injury—leaving people unsure why an airbag didn’t deploy.
- Repairs that look completed but the core issue isn’t fully explained (or the replaced components don’t tell the full story).
- Tourism and seasonal travel through nearby routes, increasing the chance of “unknown vehicle history” when a crash involves a vehicle from out of the area.
When the injury doesn’t match what you expect from a properly functioning airbag, that mismatch can matter legally. The key is building a record that ties the malfunction to your medical outcomes.


