Airbag failures can be confusing. Sometimes the vehicle is severely damaged but the restraint system never fires. Other times, it deploys and still leaves you with injuries that don’t seem to match what you’d expect from a properly functioning safety system.
Before you worry about statements, paperwork, or “what it’s worth,” gather the basics while they’re fresh:
- Your accident report number (and the responding agency when available)
- Photos of vehicle damage, the interior near the airbag module, and any visible injury areas
- Hospital/EMS records (including discharge paperwork)
- Repair documentation showing what was replaced (airbag module, inflator, sensors, wiring, restraint control unit)
- Any recall notice you received for the vehicle—plus the VIN and dates tied to that notice
In Marion, it’s also smart to note what part of your drive you were on—for example, whether the crash happened during commute traffic, a nighttime route, or a work-zone detour. Those details can matter when insurance and defense teams argue the crash conditions don’t line up with an alleged airbag malfunction.


