A product recall is a safety action, not a settlement. In North Carolina, your claim still turns on basic proof that:
- the product had a defect or dangerous condition covered by the recall,
- the defect caused or contributed to your injury, and
- your damages connect directly to what happened.
Insurance companies and defense teams commonly argue that the injury came from something else—improper installation, altered parts, normal wear and tear, or a different hazard than the one described in the notice.
Because of that, residents often need more than a recall headline; they need a clear, evidence-based story tied to the specific product and the timing of the incident.


