The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsquick-newt-035

Got rear-ended at highway speed and not a single airbag went off — is that normal??

Still kind of in shock over this whole thing so bear with me.

So last week I was stopped at a red light on a pretty busy road and got slammed from behind by someone going what witnesses said was close to 50 mph. The force pushed me into the intersection and my car spun before coming to rest against a curb. I'm talking serious, serious impact — my trunk is basically in my back seat now.

Not one airbag deployed. Not the rear ones, not the side curtains, not the front ones. Nothing.

I always assumed airbags were like... automatic in a hit that bad? My car isn't ancient — it's only a few years old. I walked away (drove away, actually, which is wild) but I've been having major neck stiffness and headaches ever since and I'm starting to wonder if I would've been better off if they had gone off.

I looked it up a little and apparently airbag deployment depends on the angle and direction of the crash sensors, and rear impacts sometimes don't trigger them the same way? But at 50 mph?? That feels wrong to me.

Has anyone else had airbags NOT deploy in what felt like a major crash? Should I be worried this is a vehicle defect issue on top of everything else? And does it affect my claim if the airbags didn't go off — like does insurance or a lawyer use that as some kind of evidence that the crash 'wasn't that bad'?

My car is totaled, I can barely turn my head, and I just want to understand what happened.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 22
    quick-stoat-933

    This happened to me in a pretty bad side-swipe a couple years ago. I was so confused — I thought airbags always deployed in anything serious. Turns out the sensors are directional and a lot of systems are calibrated mainly for frontal crashes. Didn't make me feel much better physically, but I wasn't alone. Get your neck checked out ASAP if you haven't — my whiplash symptoms got way worse before anyone took them seriously.

    • 6
      hopeful-neighbor845

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 11
    tidy-heron-236

    Not legal advice, but this is actually worth flagging to whoever represents you. Non-deployment in a high-speed crash can open up a potential product liability angle separate from your injury claim against the other driver. At minimum, do NOT let your car get crushed or repaired before someone documents everything — the ECU/event data recorder in modern vehicles logs impact data that can be pulled. Preserve that vehicle.

    • 9
      spry-vole-760

      I used to work in claims and I can tell you — we were absolutely trained to note airbag deployment status in every file. Non-deployment was sometimes used to push back on injury severity arguments. It doesn't mean your injuries aren't real, it just means you need documentation to counter that narrative. Medical records, photos, witness statements — build your paper trail early.

    • 4
      hopeful-survivor640

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 14
    silent-elk-949

    Watch out — adjusters LOVE to use airbag non-deployment as 'proof' the crash wasn't severe enough to cause your injuries. I've seen it happen. They'll say something like 'well the car's own safety systems didn't think it was serious enough to trigger.' It's total nonsense reasoning but they use it. Document your symptoms every single day in a journal starting right now.

  • 19
    humble-owl-758

    Please go get evaluated today if you haven't already. Headaches and neck stiffness after a rear-end collision at that speed can be signs of whiplash or something more. These symptoms can feel manageable at first and then escalate significantly over the next 48-72 hours. A lot of people wait too long and then their medical records have a gap that's hard to explain later. Go now.

  • 10
    clever-bison-163

    How do you know the other driver was going 50? Was that a witness estimate or did you see it on a dashcam? I'm not doubting you at all — I just know that these details matter a lot when it comes to how the claim gets handled. Also, did police come out and do a report? That speed estimate in an official report changes things.

    • 5
      restless-overpass917

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

    • 10
      careful-rider838

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 20
    silent-finch-790

    Three things you need to do right now: 1) See a doctor today and make sure whiplash/concussion is ruled out or documented. 2) Do not let anyone move or dispose of that car until the data recorder is pulled. 3) Stop talking to the other driver's insurance without knowing your rights. You're potentially looking at two separate issues here — their liability AND possibly your vehicle manufacturer's.

  • 16
    mellow-wolf-122

    Honestly the fact that you walked away from a crash that totaled your car and involved that kind of force says something. Your body might actually have absorbed it better without the airbag blast — those things hit hard and cause their own injuries. Focus on healing, get everything documented, and try not to spiral on the 'what ifs.' You're here and that matters.

    • 10
      kind-parent670

      How long did it end up taking in your case?