A recall is meant to reduce public risk, but it doesn’t automatically translate into compensation for every person who was harmed. Insurance companies and product manufacturers often argue about:
- Whether the specific unit you had was included in the recall
- Whether the defect described in the recall actually caused your injury
- Whether another factor (installation, maintenance, wear-and-tear, or misuse) contributed to what happened
In practice, that means your claim still needs proof. The recall can be important evidence—but you generally need to connect it to your product, your injury, and your timeline.


