A product recall is meant to reduce risk, but it doesn’t automatically mean you’ll receive compensation. The recall may be important evidence, especially when it identifies a specific hazard, batch, model range, or warning failure. However, Pineville injury cases still require proof that:
- The product you used is the same one included in the recall
- The defect or safety problem described in the recall existed when you were injured
- That hazard caused (or contributed to) your injuries
- Your damages match what the medical records show
In practice, many North Carolina claims stall when people assume “recall = settlement.” The better approach is to treat the recall as a starting point and build a factual case around your specific product, timeline, and injuries.


