After a collision, your immediate priority is medical care—even if you think symptoms are minor. Airbag-related injuries can show up after the fact, and medical records become essential to explain how the restraint system failure contributed to your harm.
At the same time, preserve what you can:
- photos of vehicle damage and any warning lights/airbag indicators
- the crash report number and identifying details from responding officers
- repair estimates/invoices and the parts that were replaced
- discharge papers, follow-up notes, and diagnostic results
If your vehicle was later serviced, keep every document. In product-type injury cases, “what happened next” can be as important as what happened during the crash.


