1. What Is Products Liability, and When Does It Apply?
The basic promise behind this area of law is that a product should be reasonably safe when used as intended or in a reasonably foreseeable way. When it is not, and someone gets hurt, the law provides a path to hold the responsible companies accountable.
The claim depends on showing that something about the product itself, not just how it was used, made it dangerous.
What Products Liability Is
Products liability is the legal responsibility of those who make or sell a product for injuries the product causes because it is defective.
It covers a wide range of goods, from vehicles and machinery to medications, medical devices, food, and everyday consumer products. The Consumer Product Safety Commission's NEISS system tracks consumer product-related injuries treated in emergency departments and produces nationwide estimates, showing why product safety remains a major public concern. Unlike an ordinary accident claim, the focus is on the product's condition rather than solely on someone's careless act. That focus shapes what an injured person has to prove.
The Three Kinds of Product Defects
Products liability claims generally involve one of three defects: a manufacturing defect, a design defect, or a failure to warn.
A manufacturing defect means the specific item came out wrong compared to its intended design, while design-defect cases often turn on whether the design failed consumer expectations, whether its risks outweighed its benefits, or whether a reasonable alternative design was available, depending on state law. A failure-to-warn claim argues that the product lacked adequate instructions or warnings about risks the manufacturer knew or reasonably should have known. The table below illustrates each type.
| Defect Type | What Went Wrong | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturing defect | The item differs from its intended design | A contaminated batch or a cracked part |
| Design defect | The design itself is unreasonably dangerous | A vehicle prone to rollover |
| Failure to warn | Inadequate warnings or instructions | A medication missing a key risk warning |
2. Who Can Be Held Liable, and under What Theory?
Two questions drive most products cases: which legal theory applies, and who along the chain from factory to store can be sued. The answers often expand who is responsible.
That reach is one reason products liability can lead to recovery even when the original manufacturer is out of business or overseas.
The Theories: Negligence, Strict Liability, and Warranty
Products liability can rest on negligence, strict liability, or breach of warranty, and often more than one at once.
Negligence focuses on a company's careless conduct, and it connects to ordinary negligent injury principles of duty and causation. Strict liability, adopted in many states in some form, can allow recovery without proving the manufacturer was careless, but the scope of strict liability and who qualifies as a proper defendant vary by state. Breach of warranty relies on promises about the product, including the implied warranty that goods are fit for ordinary use. The strict liability theory is often the most powerful for an injured person.
Who Is Liable Across the Supply Chain
Liability may extend to commercial sellers in the distribution chain, including manufacturers, component makers, distributors, and retailers, although some states limit claims against non-manufacturing sellers.
Because strict liability often reaches these parties, an injured person may have more than one source of recovery, which matters when one company cannot pay or is unreachable. Online marketplace liability is a developing issue, and responsibility may depend on the platform's role in listing, payment, fulfillment, control over the seller, and state law. When many people are hurt by the same product, claims may consolidate into a class action or coordinated litigation. Identifying every potentially responsible party early is a key part of the case.
3. What Do You Have to Prove, and What Can Defendants Argue?
Winning a products case requires proof on specific points, and defendants have well-developed arguments to counter each one. Understanding both sides clarifies how these cases are actually decided.
The evidence, much of it tied to the product itself, usually determines the outcome.
What an Injured Person Must Prove
An injured person generally must prove the product was defective, that the defect existed when it left the defendant's control, and that it caused the injury.
The person usually also has to show they were using the product in a reasonably foreseeable way, though not necessarily exactly as instructed. Expert analysis of the product, the design, and the injury is often central, which is why keeping the product itself is so important. Damages must be proven too, and the compensation available depends on the harm shown. If you were hurt by a product, preserve it and its packaging exactly as they are, before anything is repaired or discarded.
Common Defenses
Defendants in products cases raise defenses aimed at the defect, the causation, or the injured person's own conduct.
Common arguments include product misuse, alteration of the product after sale, assumption of risk, and comparative fault that reduces or bars recovery. Companies may also assert that the product met the state of the art at the time, or, for drugs and devices, that a warning to the prescribing physician was enough under the learned intermediary doctrine. Prescription drug and medical-device claims may face special defenses involving FDA approval, labeling control, generic-drug rules, or premarket approval for certain devices. Anticipating these defenses shapes how a strong claim is built.
4. Recovery, Deadlines, and Getting Help
A successful claim can cover far more than a hospital bill, but the window to bring it is limited and sometimes shorter than people expect. Acting promptly protects both the evidence and the claim.
Knowing what is recoverable and when it expires helps an injured person decide how to proceed.
Damages and Widespread Defects
Products liability damages can include medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and sometimes punitive damages.
Punitive damages may be available when a company knew about a danger and sold the product anyway, though rules vary by state. When a defect harms many consumers, it often surfaces through recalls and can lead to class actions or multidistrict litigation, and marketing or misrepresentation issues can overlap with false advertising claims. A recall can be important evidence, but it does not automatically prove liability, because the injured person still must connect the defect to the injury. Regulated products like drugs and medical devices raise added layers tied to pharmaceutical compliance.
5. Injured by a Defective Product: Common Questions
People hurt by a product tend to ask the same questions as they consider a claim.
Can I Sue If a Defective Product Injured Me?
Often yes. If a defective or unreasonably dangerous product caused your injury while you were using it in a foreseeable way, you may have a products liability claim. You generally must show the product was defective, that the defect existed when it left the seller, and that it caused your harm. Deadlines apply, so act promptly.
What Are the Three Types of Product Defects?
The three types are manufacturing defects, design defects, and failure-to-warn defects. A manufacturing defect means the specific item was made incorrectly, a design defect means the design itself is unreasonably dangerous, and a failure to warn means the product lacked adequate warnings or instructions about a known or knowable risk. A claim may involve more than one.
Do I Have to Prove the Company Was Negligent?
Not always. Many states allow strict liability claims, where you do not have to prove the manufacturer was careless, only that the product was defective and caused your injury. You may also have negligence and breach-of-warranty claims. Strict liability is often the strongest theory because it does not require proving fault.
Who Can I Sue for a Defective Product?
Potentially several parties in the chain of distribution, including the manufacturer, the maker of a defective component, the distributor, and the retailer that sold it. Strict liability often reaches these sellers, though some states limit claims against non-manufacturers. Online marketplaces raise developing questions about when a platform can be held responsible.
What If I Misused the Product?
It depends on how it was used. Using a product in a reasonably foreseeable way, even if not exactly as instructed, usually does not defeat a claim. But clear misuse, unforeseeable use, or altering the product after purchase can reduce or bar recovery. Comparative fault rules in your state determine how much this affects the case.
Does a Product Recall Prove My Case?
Not by itself. A recall can support a claim by showing a safety problem or a known risk, but you still must prove the product was defective, that the defect caused your injury, and that the claim was filed on time. How much a recall helps depends on the specific facts and your state's law.
How Long Do I Have to File a Products Liability Claim?
It varies by state. A statute of limitations sets the deadline from your injury or its discovery, often a few years, while a statute of repose can bar claims a fixed number of years after the product was sold. Because missing either deadline can end a claim, confirm the rules that apply to your case quickly.
What Damages Can I Recover?
Recoverable damages typically include medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering, and in some cases punitive damages when a company acted egregiously. The amount and types available depend on your injuries, the facts, and your state's law. Keeping medical records and documenting your losses supports the full value of a claim.
Do I Need a Lawyer for a Products Liability Case?
For a serious injury, yes. These cases require proving a defect through expert analysis, identifying every responsible party, and meeting strict deadlines, which is difficult without help. A lawyer can preserve the product as evidence, handle well-funded corporate defendants, and pursue the full recovery available under your state's law.
27 Oct, 2025

