In California, a product recall is a public safety action, not an automatic payout. It can be strong supporting evidence that a company recognized a risk, but your case still turns on questions like:
- Whether the product you used falls within the recall scope (model, lot, date range)
- Whether the recall issue is the type of defect that could cause your specific injury
- Whether the injury happened from the defect (or from another cause)
- What damages you suffered—medical, wage-related, and non-economic losses
For Hanford residents, that last point matters. If you’re traveling for treatment, missing time at a job, or relying on family support while recovering, the “true cost” of the injury often goes beyond what you expected on day one.


