A recall is a public safety action, but it doesn’t automatically translate into money for every injured person. Insurance carriers and defense teams may argue that:
- the recalled product wasn’t actually the same model/unit involved in your incident,
- the defect described in the recall didn’t cause your specific injury,
- your injury resulted from another factor (including installation, maintenance, or foreseeable misuse), or
- the timing and documentation don’t line up.
In Florida, resolving these questions usually comes down to evidence and deadlines—not just the fact that a recall exists. That’s why the next step after a recall should be building a clear, document-backed connection between your product, the recall scope, and your medical records.


