
Knowing how to report a vehicle defect causing injury in Georgia means filing a complaint with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) through their online portal at SaferCar.gov, notifying the vehicle manufacturer directly, and preserving all physical and medical evidence for a potential personal injury claim. Georgia residents may also have grounds to pursue compensation under product liability law, and the two-year statute of limitations under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 applies to personal injury claims arising from defective vehicles.
Most people think of vehicle accidents as human error problems, but a significant share of serious crashes trace back to faulty parts, design flaws, and manufacturing failures that drivers had no way to predict or prevent. When a vehicle betrays the person trusting it, the path to accountability runs through a reporting system that most Georgia drivers never learned existed, and understanding that system can mean the difference between getting answers and getting nothing.
What Counts as a Reportable Vehicle Defect
A reportable vehicle defect is any flaw in a vehicle’s design, manufacturing, or component parts that creates an unreasonable safety risk or causes a malfunction that leads to an accident or injury. Under federal law, the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act requires manufacturers to notify owners and remedy defects free of charge when those defects relate to motor vehicle safety.
Defects fall into three general categories recognized by NHTSA. Design defects affect every vehicle of a particular model because the problem exists in the original blueprint. Manufacturing defects occur when something goes wrong during production, affecting one or a batch of vehicles. Component defects involve faulty parts such as airbags, brakes, tires, or steering systems that were installed incorrectly or failed to meet safety standards.
Not every mechanical problem qualifies. A worn-out part from normal use or a failure caused by poor maintenance typically does not meet the federal definition of a safety defect. The defect must be related to motor vehicle safety, meaning it either creates a risk of accident or injury or reduces the vehicle’s ability to perform safely in normal operation.
Common Vehicle Defects That Cause Injuries in Georgia
Georgia roads see a wide range of defect-related accidents, and recognizing the most common types helps victims connect their injuries to the right cause.
- Brake failures – Defective brake systems, including faulty master cylinders, corroded brake lines, and defective anti-lock brake modules, can cause drivers to lose stopping power entirely, leading to rear-end crashes and intersection collisions.
- Airbag malfunctions – Airbags that fail to deploy during a crash, deploy without impact, or deploy with excessive force can cause serious facial, head, and chest injuries. The Takata airbag crisis is one of the most documented examples.
- Steering system failures – A loss of power steering or a defective steering column can make a vehicle impossible to control at highway speeds or during emergency maneuvers.
- Tire defects – Tread separation, sidewall blowouts, and bead failures caused by manufacturing errors often result in catastrophic rollover accidents, particularly on Interstate 20 and I-75 corridors in Georgia.
- Sudden unintended acceleration – Electronic throttle control defects can cause vehicles to accelerate without driver input, creating high-speed collision risks.
- Fuel system defects – Defective fuel lines or tanks that rupture during crashes significantly increase the risk of post-collision fires and burn injuries.
Understanding which defect applies to your situation directly shapes who is legally responsible and what evidence you need to collect.
How to Report a Vehicle Defect to NHTSA
Reporting a vehicle defect to NHTSA creates an official federal record that regulators use to identify patterns, open investigations, and order recalls. A single complaint may not trigger action, but your report combined with others can initiate an investigation that protects thousands of drivers.
Submit a Complaint Through the NHTSA Online Portal
The fastest way to file is through NHTSA’s online complaint system at SaferCar.gov. The portal asks for your vehicle’s make, model, year, and 17-digit Vehicle Identification Number (VIN), which you can find on your dashboard near the windshield or on your registration documents.
You will describe the defect in detail, including when it occurred, how fast the vehicle was traveling, weather conditions, and any injuries or property damage that resulted. Be as specific as possible because vague descriptions are harder for investigators to classify and act on.
File a Complaint by Phone
If you prefer speaking with someone directly, call NHTSA’s Vehicle Safety Hotline at 1-888-327-4236. Representatives are available Monday through Friday and can walk you through the complaint submission process verbally.
Phone complaints carry the same official weight as online submissions and are entered into the same database that NHTSA investigators review when identifying defect trends across manufacturers and model years.
Request an Investigation in Writing
For more serious defects that caused significant injury, you can send a written request to NHTSA asking the agency to open a formal Engineering Analysis. This request should include your complaint number, supporting evidence such as repair records or medical reports, and a clear explanation of why you believe the defect poses a broader public safety risk.
Written requests are reviewed by NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation and may result in a Preliminary Evaluation, an Engineering Analysis, or a recall determination. Having an attorney help draft this request can improve its clarity and impact.
How to Notify the Vehicle Manufacturer Directly
Federal law under 49 U.S.C. § 30118 requires vehicle manufacturers to act when they become aware of safety defects, which is why your direct notification matters beyond just the federal report. Contact the manufacturer’s customer service line or their official safety recall department using the contact information in your owner’s manual or on the manufacturer’s website.
When you contact the manufacturer, put your communication in writing and send it via certified mail so you have a delivery record. Include your VIN, the date of the defect event, a description of what happened, and any injuries or damage that resulted. This written record becomes important if you later pursue a product liability claim, because it shows the manufacturer had direct notice of the defect from your vehicle specifically.
Keep copies of every response you receive from the manufacturer. Manufacturers sometimes issue Technical Service Bulletins (TSBs) in response to reported defects before a full recall is ordered, and knowing whether a TSB existed for your vehicle’s problem can significantly affect your legal claim.
Preserving Evidence After a Defect-Related Injury
Evidence preservation is one of the most important actions you can take after a defect causes an injury in Georgia, and it must begin immediately after the incident.
Photograph and Secure the Vehicle
Take detailed photographs of the vehicle from every angle, with close-up images of the specific component you believe failed. Do not allow the vehicle to be repaired, scrapped, or returned to the manufacturer before an independent expert examines it.
If the vehicle is totaled and the insurance company or manufacturer wants to take possession, contact an attorney before releasing it. Once a defective part is destroyed or returned, it may be permanently lost as evidence.
Obtain All Medical Documentation
Seek medical attention immediately after any defect-related injury, even if your symptoms seem minor at first. Medical records that connect your injuries to the date of the incident are a foundational piece of any product liability claim in Georgia.
Request copies of all emergency room records, physician notes, diagnostic imaging, and prescribed treatment plans. These documents establish the nature and severity of your injuries and link them directly to the defect event.
Gather Supporting Documentation
Collect the police report filed at the scene, any witness contact information, and records of any prior complaints or recalls associated with your vehicle’s VIN. You can check for existing recalls at NHTSA’s VIN lookup tool on SaferCar.gov.
Keep records of every repair done on the vehicle before the defect event, particularly any work done on the component that failed. Prior repair history can show whether a mechanic or dealer missed a known defect, which may create additional liability beyond the manufacturer.
Filing a Product Liability Claim in Georgia
Georgia product liability law allows injury victims to hold manufacturers, distributors, and sellers accountable when a defective vehicle or component causes harm. Claims typically rest on one of three legal theories.
The first is strict liability, which means the manufacturer can be held responsible regardless of whether they were negligent, as long as the product was defective and that defect caused the injury. The second is negligence, where the injured party must show the manufacturer failed to exercise reasonable care in the design, manufacture, or testing of the vehicle. The third is breach of warranty, which applies when the vehicle failed to meet the safety promises made in an express or implied warranty under O.C.G.A. § 11-2-314.
Georgia follows a modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33, meaning your compensation can be reduced if you are found partially at fault. If your share of fault reaches 50% or more, you cannot recover damages at all, which is why accurately identifying the defect as the primary cause of the accident is so important to your case.
Georgia’s Statute of Limitations for Defect Injury Claims
The time limits for filing a vehicle defect injury claim in Georgia are strict, and missing them permanently bars recovery.
For personal injury claims, O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 gives you two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. For property damage claims, the limit is four years under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-31. If the defect caused a death, the surviving family has two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2.
Georgia courts rarely grant exceptions to these deadlines. The discovery rule may apply in limited cases where the defect was not reasonably discoverable at the time of the injury, but courts interpret this narrowly. Acting quickly after a defect-related injury is the safest approach to protecting your right to compensation.
When to Contact a Truck or Vehicle Defect Injury Attorney
A vehicle defect injury attorney becomes essential when the cause of your accident may be a manufacturing or design flaw rather than driver error. Defect cases require expert witnesses, vehicle inspections, engineering analysis, and often access to internal manufacturer documents, all of which require legal resources and experience to obtain.
If you were injured in a commercial truck accident caused by a vehicle defect, the legal complexity increases significantly. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) regulations impose additional maintenance and inspection obligations on commercial carriers, and violations of those regulations can establish negligence per se under Georgia law. Trucking companies, fleet operators, and parts manufacturers may all share liability.
The Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group has helped Georgia injury victims pursue claims against vehicle manufacturers and commercial carriers when defective equipment caused preventable accidents. If a vehicle defect played a role in your injury, call (404) 446-0847 for a free consultation and let our team review your case before evidence is lost or time limits expire.
What Happens After You File a NHTSA Complaint
Filing a NHTSA complaint does not automatically trigger a recall or investigation, but it sets the official process in motion. NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation reviews incoming complaints and looks for patterns across multiple vehicles, makes, and models.
When enough related complaints accumulate, NHTSA opens a Preliminary Evaluation, which is the first stage of a formal investigation. If the Preliminary Evaluation shows sufficient evidence of a safety risk, it advances to an Engineering Analysis where investigators examine vehicle data, conduct tests, and review manufacturer records. A recall can be ordered at any stage if NHTSA determines a defect poses an unreasonable risk to safety, and manufacturers who fail to comply face civil penalties under 49 U.S.C. § 30165.
Your individual complaint becomes part of the permanent federal record and can be referenced by other consumers, attorneys, and regulators. Even if your complaint does not trigger a recall on its own, it may be the piece that crosses the threshold for investigators already monitoring a particular issue.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I report a vehicle defect if the car was already repaired?
Yes, you can still file a complaint with NHTSA even if the vehicle has already been repaired. The complaint database is used to identify safety trends, and your report of what occurred before the repair adds valuable data that helps investigators detect patterns across similar vehicles. Include the repair records with your complaint so investigators understand the full timeline.
The more challenging issue is preserving your legal claim. If the defective part was repaired or replaced before being examined by an independent expert, that evidence may be gone. If you suspect a defect caused your injury and the vehicle has already been repaired, contact an attorney immediately to assess what documentation still exists and whether your claim can be supported.
What if the manufacturer claims the defect is covered under a recall I never received notice of?
Georgia residents who did not receive recall notices have options. Under federal law, manufacturers are required to notify registered owners of safety recalls by first-class mail, but notices can be missed if your address was not current with the state. You can check whether your vehicle has any open recalls at any time using NHTSA’s free VIN lookup tool at SaferCar.gov.
If a recall existed before your accident and the manufacturer failed to properly notify you or remedy the defect within a reasonable time, that failure can strengthen your product liability claim. An attorney can investigate whether the manufacturer fulfilled their federal notification obligations and use any failure as evidence of negligence in your case.
How long does a NHTSA investigation take?
NHTSA investigations vary widely in length. A Preliminary Evaluation typically takes two to four months, while a full Engineering Analysis can take one to two years or longer depending on the complexity of the defect and the number of vehicles involved. High-priority safety issues may move faster, especially if injuries or deaths have already been reported in connection with the defect.
Your personal injury claim does not wait for a NHTSA investigation to conclude. You can pursue compensation in Georgia courts based on the evidence available at the time your case is filed. A NHTSA finding in your favor can support your claim, but it is not required, and waiting for federal action could cause you to miss Georgia’s two-year statute of limitations.
Do I need a lawyer to report a vehicle defect to NHTSA?
No, you do not need a lawyer to file a NHTSA complaint. The online portal at SaferCar.gov is designed for direct consumer use, and the phone hotline at 1-888-327-4236 is also publicly accessible without legal representation. Filing the complaint yourself is straightforward and should be done as soon as possible after the incident.
However, if you suffered injuries as a result of the defect, consulting an attorney before taking any other steps is strongly recommended. Legal representation matters most when dealing with insurance companies, preserving physical evidence, and building a product liability claim. An attorney can also file a complaint on your behalf and help ensure the description captures the legally relevant details that support your case.
Can I sue both the vehicle manufacturer and the other driver if both contributed to my injury?
Yes, Georgia law allows you to name multiple defendants in a personal injury lawsuit when more than one party contributed to your injury. Under the modified comparative fault framework in O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33, a jury can assign percentages of fault to each defendant, including a negligent driver, a vehicle manufacturer, a parts supplier, or even a repair shop that missed a known defect.
Each defendant is responsible for paying their proportionate share of your damages based on the fault percentage assigned to them. This means you are not limited to pursuing only one responsible party, and in defect cases involving serious injuries, building claims against multiple defendants often produces better results than focusing on one source of liability alone.
Conclusion
Reporting a vehicle defect causing injury in Georgia requires acting on multiple fronts at the same time: filing a federal complaint with NHTSA, notifying the manufacturer in writing, preserving physical and medical evidence, and understanding your rights under Georgia product liability law. Each of these steps protects a different dimension of your safety and your legal claim.
The Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group handles defect-related vehicle injury cases throughout Georgia and understands how to build claims when faulty equipment is the cause of serious harm. Call (404) 446-0847 today to speak with an attorney who can help you protect your rights before critical evidence disappears.