In many cases, people assume that once the manufacturer issues a recall, insurance and the company will quickly step in. In reality, claims still turn on proof:
- Which exact unit you had (model, serial/lot information, purchase details)
- What caused the injury (the specific defect or hazard described in the recall)
- How the product was being used at the time of the incident
- Whether the product was altered, repaired, or installed differently than intended
Even when the recall is public, the defense may argue the injury came from something else—especially where products are used in different ways by different households, caregivers, or contractors.


