Many airbag issues don’t “look obvious” at first. In suburban crashes—rear-end collisions, low-speed impacts that still cause injury, and side impacts during lane changes—the difference between a typical injury pattern and an airbag-related injury mechanism may require careful documentation.
In New Jersey, insurers and defense counsel often scrutinize whether the injury is consistent with how the restraint system should have behaved. That means your case can turn on details such as:
- What the vehicle’s restraint warning lights showed (if any)
- Whether the airbag deployed as expected for the crash severity
- Repair notes describing airbag module or inflator replacement
- Treatment records connecting symptoms to the restraint event
Even if you already filed an auto claim, a defective airbag case may involve different proof and different responsible parties than your standard collision claim.


