Your first priority is medical care. But while you’re still dealing with the shock of a crash, small details can fade fast—especially in busy days when you’re trying to get back to work.
If you can, start gathering the following right away:
- Crash documentation: any police/incident report number, photos of the vehicle’s interior (airbag area, dash, seat belt marks), and photos of visible damage.
- Repair and inspection records: invoices, written notes from the body shop, and any “diagnostic” results they ran.
- Medical timeline: ER discharge papers, imaging reports, treatment plans, and follow-up visits.
- Vehicle identifiers: VIN, recall notices you were given, and the date you learned about any safety campaign.
These items help an attorney evaluate whether your injury fits the type of harm that airbags are designed to prevent—and whether a product defect theory may apply.


