A product recall is a safety action, not an automatic payout. For a claim to succeed, you still have to prove:
- the product involved matches the recall scope (model/lot/date matters),
- a safety defect or inadequate warning existed,
- the defect caused (or contributed to) the injury,
- and your damages are supported by medical records.
In practice, defendants may argue the injury came from something else—improper installation, misuse, normal wear, or a different product version than the one included in the recall. That’s why your next steps after the recall letter matters just as much as the recall itself.


