A recall is a public safety action, but it doesn’t automatically mean you’ll be compensated. Insurance companies and product manufacturers typically investigate questions like:
- Was your exact model/batch included?
- Was the product used as intended (or in a foreseeable way)?
- What caused the injury—defect, installation, maintenance, or something else?
- How do your medical records connect to the hazard described in the recall?
In practice, the biggest friction point we see in Fort Lauderdale cases is that people often discover the recall after the fact—sometimes after a trip, a move, or a busy stretch where the product gets stored, repaired, or discarded. When that happens, crucial identifying information can disappear.


