
A faulty tire accident in Georgia may entitle you to compensation from multiple parties, including the tire manufacturer, vehicle seller, or maintenance provider, depending on what caused the defect. Your first steps after the crash are to seek medical care, preserve the tire and vehicle, report the accident, and consult a Georgia truck or auto accident attorney to identify all liable parties before the statute of limitations expires.
Most drivers never think about their tires until something goes wrong at highway speed. A sudden blowout or tread separation is not just a mechanical inconvenience; it can send a vehicle spinning across multiple lanes, flip a truck, or cause a chain-reaction crash that injures dozens of people. What makes these cases different from a standard car accident is the question of who bears responsibility, because when a defective product causes a crash, the legal path forward looks very different from a typical rear-end collision or intersection wreck.
Immediate Steps After a Faulty Tire Accident in Georgia
The actions you take in the minutes and hours after a tire-related crash can directly affect the strength of your legal claim. Georgia’s product liability laws require clear evidence that the tire was defective and that the defect caused the accident.
Move to Safety and Call 911
Get yourself and any passengers out of active traffic as quickly as possible without abandoning the vehicle in a dangerous position. Turn on your hazard lights immediately and, if possible, move the vehicle to a shoulder or emergency lane before stopping.
Call 911 right away. A police report is one of the most important documents in any Georgia accident claim, and officers can also secure the scene, call for emergency services, and document road conditions that may have contributed to the crash.
Seek Medical Attention Right Away
Go to the emergency room or an urgent care center even if your injuries feel minor. Tire blowout accidents often involve significant impact forces, and conditions like traumatic brain injury, internal bleeding, or spinal trauma may not produce obvious symptoms immediately after a crash.
Your medical records will become a central part of your personal injury claim. Any delay in treatment gives an insurance company grounds to argue that your injuries were not serious or that they resulted from something other than the accident.
Preserve the Defective Tire and Vehicle
This step is the most important thing that separates a tire defect case from an ordinary accident claim. Do not allow anyone to repair, replace, or dispose of the failed tire. The physical tire itself is your primary piece of evidence.
Ask the tow company in writing to store the vehicle without altering it. Photograph the tire from every angle before the vehicle is moved, and photograph the remaining tires as well. If the tire came off the vehicle during the crash, locate it and keep it secured.
Document the Scene Thoroughly
Use your phone to photograph skid marks, debris patterns, the point of impact, road conditions, and all vehicles involved. Wide-angle shots of the full scene and close-up shots of damage will both be useful later.
Collect contact information from every witness at the scene. Independent witnesses who can describe what happened just before the crash, such as seeing a sudden swerve or hearing a loud pop, can significantly strengthen a tire defect claim.
Report the Accident and Notify Your Insurer
Georgia law requires drivers involved in accidents causing injury, death, or significant property damage to report the crash to law enforcement, which is handled through the 911 call mentioned above. You will also need to notify your own automobile insurer promptly under the terms of your policy.
When speaking with your insurer, describe what happened factually and avoid speculating about fault. Do not give a recorded statement to any other party’s insurance company before consulting an attorney, because those statements can be used against your claim later.
Understanding Tire Defects and How They Cause Accidents
Not every tire failure is a product defect. A defect means something was wrong with the tire itself, separate from road hazards or driver error, and identifying that distinction is what determines whether a manufacturer or another third party can be held liable.
Types of Tire Defects That Lead to Accidents
Tire defects generally fall into categories based on where the failure originates in the manufacturing or design process. Knowing the type of defect in your case matters because it affects which party is responsible.
Common defects that Georgia courts and accident investigators examine include:
- Tread separation – The outer tread layer peels away from the inner layers at highway speed, causing immediate loss of vehicle control.
- Belt separation – Internal steel belts separate from surrounding rubber, creating a bulge or sudden blowout without prior warning.
- Sidewall failure – Weakness in the sidewall causes the tire to collapse under load, particularly in trucks and SUVs carrying heavy cargo.
- Bead defects – A compromised bead, the edge of the tire that seats against the rim, can cause the tire to dismount from the wheel unexpectedly.
- Underinflation-related defects – Some tires are defectively designed to fail catastrophically under normal load when slightly underinflated rather than simply losing pressure gradually.
After a crash, a forensic tire expert can examine the failed tire and determine whether the failure was caused by a design flaw, a manufacturing error, or external factors like a road hazard.
The Difference Between a Defective Tire and Normal Wear
A tire that fails because it was old, worn past its tread depth, or improperly maintained is generally not a product defect case. Georgia product liability claims require the defect to have existed when the tire left the manufacturer’s or seller’s control.
However, some failures that appear to be wear-related are actually design defects in disguise. For example, if a tire’s tread is engineered to separate prematurely under normal driving conditions, that is a design flaw even if the tire shows wear. An experienced accident attorney can connect you with the right expert to make this distinction.
Who Can Be Held Liable for a Faulty Tire Accident in Georgia
Georgia product liability law allows injured victims to pursue claims against every party in the supply chain that placed a defective tire into commerce. This is governed primarily under O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11, which holds manufacturers strictly liable for defective products that cause injury.
The Tire Manufacturer
If the tire was defective because of a flaw in its design or because an error occurred during production, the manufacturer bears primary liability. Under strict liability, you do not need to prove the manufacturer was careless; you only need to show the tire was defective and the defect caused your injury.
Major tire manufacturers have faced numerous product liability lawsuits in Georgia and across the United States. If a particular tire model has a history of failures, prior recall records or federal safety complaints filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) can serve as powerful supporting evidence.
The Tire Retailer or Distributor
Any business that sold or distributed the defective tire may also share liability under Georgia law. This includes discount tire shops, auto parts retailers, and online distributors that shipped tires directly to consumers.
A retailer can be held liable even if they did nothing to alter the tire, because placing a defective product into the chain of commerce is itself a basis for liability under O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11. If the retailer also installed the tire, there may be additional negligence claims related to improper mounting or inflation.
The Vehicle Manufacturer
In some cases, the vehicle itself contributes to a tire failure. A vehicle with a suspension or alignment design that causes abnormal tire wear may be partly responsible if that abnormal wear contributed to the blowout.
A vehicle manufacturer may also be liable if the original equipment tires that came with the vehicle were known to be incompatible with the vehicle’s weight or speed ratings. In these situations, both the vehicle manufacturer and the tire manufacturer may share liability.
A Mechanic or Maintenance Provider
If a tire failure resulted from improper service, such as incorrect mounting, failure to replace a clearly worn tire, or wrong inflation during routine maintenance, the shop that performed that service may be liable for negligence. This applies to dealerships, oil change shops, alignment shops, and any other service provider that handled the tire.
Under Georgia negligence law, a mechanic who fails to meet the standard of care expected of a competent automotive professional can be held responsible for the consequences of that failure. Maintenance records and invoices from prior service visits are key evidence in these situations.
Georgia Product Liability Laws That Apply to Tire Defect Cases
Georgia’s legal framework for defective tire cases draws from both strict liability and negligence principles. Understanding which legal theory applies to your situation helps determine what you must prove to win your claim.
Strict Liability Under Georgia Law
O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11 establishes that manufacturers are strictly liable when a product that leaves their control in a defective condition causes injury. In a strict liability claim, the injured party does not need to prove the manufacturer knew about the defect or acted carelessly; the defect and the resulting harm are sufficient.
This is a significant advantage for tire accident victims. Proving a company’s internal quality control failures is difficult and expensive. Strict liability removes that burden and focuses the case on whether the tire was defective when it was sold and whether that defect caused the crash.
Negligence Claims Against Service Providers
When a mechanic or maintenance shop contributed to the tire failure, the legal standard shifts to negligence. A negligence claim requires showing that the service provider owed a duty of care, breached that duty by failing to meet professional standards, and that the breach directly caused the accident and your injuries.
Georgia courts apply the modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33. This means your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault, and if you are found to be 50 percent or more at fault, you cannot recover at all. Insurance companies frequently try to assign fault to the driver in tire cases, which is why building strong evidence early matters so much.
Georgia’s Statute of Limitations for Tire Accident Claims
Under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33, you have two years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury lawsuit in Georgia. For wrongful death claims arising from a fatal tire accident, the same two-year period applies under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2.
Product liability claims against manufacturers must also generally be filed within two years, but Georgia also has a statute of repose under O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11(b)(2) that can bar claims for products more than ten years old. Acting quickly after a tire accident protects your rights and gives your legal team time to preserve evidence before it is lost.
How a Georgia Attorney Investigates a Faulty Tire Accident Claim
Tire defect cases require a level of technical investigation that goes well beyond a standard car accident claim. An experienced attorney will bring in specialized resources to build a case that can withstand manufacturer defenses.
Retaining a Forensic Tire Expert
A forensic tire engineer examines the failed tire to determine the mechanical cause of the failure. This expert can identify whether the failure originated from a manufacturing error, a design flaw, or external damage that the manufacturer should have anticipated in the tire’s design.
Their findings are typically presented in a written report and may include comparison testing with other tires from the same production batch. If NHTSA has received prior complaints about the same tire model, the expert will incorporate that data into the analysis.
Reviewing Maintenance and Purchase Records
Your attorney will request all maintenance records related to the vehicle and the failed tire. This includes tire purchase receipts, installation records, inflation history, rotation logs, and any prior service involving the wheels or suspension.
These records serve two purposes. First, they help eliminate alternative causes of the failure that a manufacturer might raise as a defense. Second, if a service provider failed to catch an obvious problem during a prior visit, those records become the foundation of a negligence claim against that shop.
Requesting NHTSA Complaint and Recall Records
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration maintains a public database of complaints and recalls tied to specific tire models. If your tire model has been the subject of prior complaints, investigations, or a formal recall, that information is admissible and highly persuasive in a tire defect lawsuit.
Your attorney will also determine whether the manufacturer issued any technical service bulletins related to the tire. These internal communications sometimes acknowledge awareness of a defect before a formal recall is initiated, which can support a claim that the manufacturer knew about the problem and failed to act quickly enough.
Compensation Available in a Georgia Faulty Tire Accident Case
Georgia law allows injured victims of defective tire accidents to recover several categories of damages. The total value of a claim depends on the severity of injuries, the strength of the liability evidence, and whether the defendant’s conduct warrants punitive damages.
Economic Damages
Economic damages cover measurable financial losses directly caused by the accident. These are calculated using bills, pay stubs, invoices, and expert projections.
Recoverable economic damages in a tire accident case typically include:
- Medical expenses – Emergency treatment, hospitalization, surgeries, rehabilitation, physical therapy, and ongoing care costs.
- Lost wages – Income lost while recovering, calculated from pay records or tax returns.
- Future lost earning capacity – If injuries permanently limit your ability to work, a vocational and economic expert can project lifetime income losses.
- Property damage – Repair or replacement cost of the vehicle and any personal property destroyed in the crash.
- Out-of-pocket expenses – Transportation to medical appointments, home care costs, and adaptive equipment.
Non-Economic Damages
Non-economic damages compensate for harm that does not come with a receipt. Georgia does not cap non-economic damages in most personal injury cases, which is significant in serious tire accident cases.
These damages include physical pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, permanent scarring or disfigurement, and loss of consortium for an injured victim’s spouse. Juries in Georgia weigh these damages based on the severity and permanence of the injuries.
Punitive Damages in Defective Tire Cases
Under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1, Georgia courts may award punitive damages when a defendant’s conduct shows willful misconduct, malice, fraud, or conscious indifference to the consequences. In a tire defect case, punitive damages may apply if the manufacturer continued selling a tire model after receiving evidence of serious safety failures.
Punitive damages in Georgia are generally capped at $250,000 in product liability cases, with exceptions for product liability cases involving intentional conduct. An attorney can assess whether the facts of your case support a punitive damages claim.
What If a Faulty Tire Caused a Truck Accident in Georgia
Tire failures on commercial trucks create significantly more damage than passenger vehicle blowouts because of the weight and momentum involved. A fully loaded semi-truck can weigh up to 80,000 pounds, and a rear tire blowout at highway speed can cause catastrophic multi-vehicle collisions.
Additional Liable Parties in Commercial Truck Tire Cases
Federal trucking regulations enforced by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) require commercial carriers to conduct pre-trip inspections of all tires before each trip. If a trucker or fleet operator ignored visible signs of tire wear or damage, the trucking company shares liability alongside the tire manufacturer.
The trucking company’s maintenance contractor, the truck’s owner if different from the operator, and the cargo loading company may also share fault depending on the circumstances. For example, overloaded cargo can cause tire failure even on a structurally sound tire, making the shipper potentially liable.
FMCSA Tire Regulations and Georgia Trucking Law
Under 49 C.F.R. § 393.75, commercial motor vehicles are prohibited from operating with tires that have exposed cords, improper inflation, or load ratings insufficient for the vehicle’s weight. Violations of these federal standards can be introduced as evidence of negligence per se in a Georgia lawsuit.
Georgia also requires commercial carriers to maintain inspection logs under state regulations coordinated with FMCSA oversight. If a trucking company’s logs show the tire that failed was documented as questionable in a prior inspection but was not replaced, that record becomes damaging evidence against the carrier.
How to Choose the Right Attorney for a Faulty Tire Accident Case
Tire defect cases require attorneys who handle product liability and serious vehicle accident claims, not general practitioners. The complexity of the technical investigation and the resources needed to litigate against major tire manufacturers demand specialized experience.
Look for an attorney or firm that has handled product liability cases involving vehicle defects, has relationships with forensic tire experts, and is willing to take cases on a contingency fee basis so you pay nothing unless you recover compensation. Check whether the firm has taken cases to trial rather than always settling, because manufacturers are more likely to offer fair settlements when they know the opposing attorney will go to court.
If you were injured in a faulty tire accident in Georgia, the Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group is ready to help. Call (404) 446-0847 for a free consultation to discuss your case, understand your legal options, and start the evidence preservation process before time runs out.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I sue a tire manufacturer if the tire was old but still within its rated mileage?
Yes, age and mileage ratings are separate measures of tire safety. A tire can fail due to a manufacturing defect before it reaches its mileage limit, and a manufacturer cannot use mileage availability as a complete defense if the tire had a structural defect from the time it was produced. Georgia’s strict liability standard under O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11 focuses on whether a defect existed when the tire left the manufacturer’s control, not on how long the tire had been in use.
However, if the tire’s failure was partly related to its age or storage conditions, the manufacturer may argue comparative fault. An experienced attorney and a forensic tire expert can counter this by showing the defect was inherent in the tire’s construction rather than a result of how it was used.
What should I do if the tire was replaced before I could have it inspected?
Act immediately to locate the tire. Contact the body shop, insurance adjuster, or tow company that handled the vehicle and request that the tire be preserved in writing. If the tire has already been destroyed or discarded, your attorney may be able to pursue a spoliation of evidence argument against the party responsible for disposing of it.
Even without the physical tire, other evidence can support a defect claim. Photographs taken at the scene, witness accounts of how the failure occurred, and data from the vehicle’s electronic data recorder can help reconstruct what happened. NHTSA complaint records for the same tire model can also supplement the missing physical evidence.
How long does a faulty tire accident lawsuit take in Georgia?
The timeline varies depending on the number of defendants, the complexity of the technical investigation, and whether the case settles or goes to trial. Straightforward cases involving a single defendant and clear liability may resolve in 12 to 24 months. Cases against large tire manufacturers with significant damages often take longer because manufacturers have legal teams that will challenge every element of the claim.
Georgia’s two-year statute of limitations under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 means you must file your lawsuit within two years of the accident date regardless of how long negotiations take. Filing within that window preserves your rights and signals to the manufacturer that you are serious about pursuing the claim.
Does Georgia law require me to prove the tire manufacturer knew about the defect?
No. Under Georgia’s strict product liability law at O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11, you do not need to prove the manufacturer had prior knowledge of the defect. You only need to demonstrate that the tire was defective when it left the manufacturer’s control and that the defect directly caused your injuries. This is a lower standard than traditional negligence, which requires proof of fault.
If you can show the manufacturer did have prior knowledge, such as through NHTSA complaints, internal testing records, or prior lawsuits, that evidence supports a claim for punitive damages in addition to compensatory damages. Knowledge of a defect combined with continued sales is one of the strongest grounds for a punitive damages award under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1.
What if I was partly at fault for the tire accident, such as driving on a tire I knew was worn?
Georgia’s modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 allows you to recover compensation even if you were partially at fault, as long as your share of fault is less than 50 percent. Your total compensation is reduced proportionally by your percentage of fault. So if you are found 20 percent at fault and your damages total $100,000, you would recover $80,000.
Insurance companies aggressively try to maximize the driver’s assigned fault percentage in tire defect cases to reduce their payout. If you knew the tire was worn and drove on it anyway, they will use that against you. An attorney can contextualize that evidence by showing that even a worn tire should not have failed in the catastrophic way it did if it had not also been defectively manufactured.
Conclusion
A faulty tire accident in Georgia is not just an unfortunate mechanical failure; it is a situation where one or more parties may be legally responsible for the harm caused to you. From preserving the physical tire to identifying every liable party in the supply chain, the steps you take immediately after the crash shape the entire outcome of your case.
The Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group has the resources, technical relationships, and litigation experience to pursue tire defect claims against manufacturers, distributors, and negligent service providers. Call (404) 446-0847 today to speak with an attorney who understands what your case requires and can start working on it right away.