Many Allen residents drive the same familiar routes for work and school, including busy stretches that can involve sudden stops, rear-end impacts, and multi-vehicle collisions. In those situations, people often assume an airbag “must have worked” because the crash looked serious—or they assume it “didn’t deploy” because the impact “didn’t seem that bad.”
But airbags are controlled by sensors and restraint algorithms. That means the airbag response you experienced may not match what you expected based on the visible damage.
When you’re injured in an Allen-area crash—especially if you were treated at an urgent care or the ER—your next steps matter. The evidence most helpful for an airbag defect claim can depend on what was recorded at the scene, what the vehicle repair shop noted, and what was (and wasn’t) saved from the vehicle inspection.


