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Updated November 2025
A defective product can change your life in seconds. A car seat that fails in a low-speed crash. A power tool that kicks back without warning. A prescription drug that causes side effects the label never mentioned. If a product you bought in Phoenix hurt you or someone in your family, Arizona law gives you a path to recover, but only if you know how to use it.
This page is the working guide to product liability claims in Arizona. We cover what you have to prove, who can be held liable, the damages available, the defenses manufacturers raise, and how long you have to file. If you’d rather just talk to a Phoenix product liability lawyer, call (602) 345-1818 for a free case review.
Product liability cases are different from car accident cases. The defendants are usually large corporations with in-house counsel, expert witnesses on retainer, and a clear playbook for shutting claims down quickly. The factual investigation has to happen fast, before the product is repaired, scrapped, or “lost” by the manufacturer’s warranty department.
Our team handles these cases by getting the right pieces locked down early:
You’re not going to out-resource a large manufacturer alone. That’s the point of having a lawyer who has been on the other side of these cases.
Arizona’s Product Liability Act is codified at A.R.S. § 12-681 through § 12-689. Under § 12-681(5), a plaintiff can plead three different theories in the same case:
Most Arizona product liability cases lead with strict liability because the plaintiff doesn’t have to prove the manufacturer knew about the defect. You just have to prove the defect existed and caused the harm. But pleading negligence and warranty alongside strict liability gives the case more angles and more leverage at the negotiating table.
The burden of proof in a civil product liability case is preponderance of the evidence, meaning more likely than not. For punitive damages, the standard climbs to clear and convincing evidence of an “evil mind,” which is a much heavier lift.
Per the Arizona State Bar’s product liability framework and § 12-681, defects fall into three categories. The category matters because it changes how the case is investigated and which experts you need.
The product was designed in a way that’s inherently unsafe, and the danger outweighs the benefit. Every unit coming off the line has the same problem. Example: a Phoenix-area homeowner buys an SUV with a known rollover risk at highway speeds. The vehicle was manufactured exactly as designed. The design itself is the defect.
These cases usually require a “reasonable alternative design” analysis from an engineering expert: could the manufacturer have built the product safer at reasonable cost?
The product was designed safely, but something went wrong during production. One unit, one batch, one factory shift. Example: a brake line on a single motorcycle was crimped at the wrong torque during assembly and failed two months later in Scottsdale.
Manufacturing defect cases are often the easiest to prove if you still have the product, because the defective unit can be compared directly to the manufacturer’s own specs.
The product itself is fine, but the warnings or instructions are inadequate. The manufacturer either failed to warn about a known risk or buried the warning where no reasonable user would find it. Common in pharmaceutical cases, household chemical cases, and power tool cases.
Arizona law requires warnings to be conspicuous, clear, and proportional to the risk. A tiny warning on the bottom of a bottle of pesticide about a serious neurological side effect is generally not adequate.
Under A.R.S. § 12-681(2), the definition of “manufacturer” sweeps broadly. Anyone in the chain of distribution can potentially be held liable under strict liability:
This is called the chain of distribution doctrine, and it matters for one practical reason: if the original manufacturer is out of business, bankrupt, or based overseas where you can’t enforce a judgment, you still have other defendants. Naming a Phoenix-area retailer keeps the case in Arizona court and keeps it moving.
There’s a wrinkle. Under A.R.S. § 12-684, a non-manufacturing retailer or wholesaler can sometimes shift liability back to the manufacturer if they can show they had no role in the design, no actual knowledge of the defect, and the manufacturer is subject to Arizona jurisdiction. That doesn’t mean the retailer can’t be sued. It means the retailer may eventually drop out if the manufacturer steps in.
A successful claim can recover three categories of damages.
Economic damages. Your out-of-pocket and verifiable financial losses: medical bills (past and future), lost wages, lost earning capacity, property damage, and other quantifiable costs. See our breakdown of economic damages for the full list.
Non-economic damages. Pain, suffering, disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life, emotional distress, and loss of consortium. Here’s something most people don’t realize: Arizona has no cap on non-economic damages. Article 2, Section 31 of the Arizona Constitution explicitly prohibits the legislature from limiting damages for death or injury. That’s a meaningful protection. Many other states impose statutory caps on pain and suffering recovery, particularly in medical malpractice cases, and for catastrophic injury cases involving permanent disfigurement or paralysis, Arizona’s constitutional rule can be a significant factor in case value. Use our pain and suffering calculator for a baseline estimate of how non-economic damages are typically modeled.
Punitive damages. Available in cases where the manufacturer acted with what Arizona courts describe as an “evil mind,” meaning conscious disregard for a substantial risk of harm. The Arizona Supreme Court developed this standard in cases including Rawlings v. Apodaca and Linthicum v. Nationwide Life Insurance Co., and it requires clear and convincing evidence, a higher bar than the preponderance standard used for compensatory damages. Punitive damages are typically awarded in product cases where internal company documents show the manufacturer knew about the defect and decided the cost of a recall was higher than the cost of paying out lawsuits.
Settlement values vary enormously based on injury severity, evidence quality, and the defendant’s exposure. General ranges reported in Maricopa County product liability cases:
These are reported case ranges, not predictions about any specific claim. Every case turns on its own facts.
Every manufacturer has a defense playbook. Here are the four you’ll see most often in Arizona product liability cases.
Product misuse. The defense argues you used the product in a way the manufacturer didn’t intend or foresee. The counter: was the misuse reasonably foreseeable? Arizona courts hold manufacturers responsible for foreseeable misuse, not just intended use. A ladder manufacturer knows people stand on the top step. A power tool maker knows users sometimes remove safety guards.
Product alteration. Under A.R.S. § 12-683(2), a manufacturer can avoid liability if the product was altered or modified after leaving its control and the alteration caused the injury. The counter: was the alteration substantial, and did it actually cause the injury? Replacing a worn-out part with an OEM-spec replacement is not the kind of alteration that breaks the chain of causation.
State-of-the-art defense. Under A.R.S. § 12-683, a manufacturer can argue the product met the best available scientific and technical knowledge at the time it was made. This is a powerful defense in pharmaceutical and medical device cases. The counter: state-of-the-art is not the same as industry custom. We work with experts to show what the manufacturer knew or should have known at the time of production, often by pulling internal R&D documents in discovery.
Comparative fault. Arizona applies pure comparative fault under A.R.S. § 12-2505. The defense argues you were partly at fault and your recovery should be reduced by your percentage of responsibility. Under the pure system, partial fault reduces recovery but does not by itself bar it for ordinary negligence. There are statutory exceptions: recovery can be barred where the plaintiff intentionally or willfully caused the injury, or where the injury occurred while the plaintiff was committing a felony. The defense uses comparative fault to chip away at value in most cases, not to win outright, but the exceptions matter and have to be evaluated case by case.
The general personal injury statute of limitations applies: two years from the date of injury under A.R.S. § 12-542.
A few important wrinkles:
Bottom line: two years from the date of injury is the safe assumption. Anything beyond that needs a lawyer’s review before you decide the claim is dead.
Arizona’s product liability docket is bigger than most people assume. According to the National Safety Council, approximately 12.7 million people are treated in U.S. emergency departments annually for injuries involving consumer products. That covers everything from kitchen appliances to power tools to children’s toys.
Maricopa County sees its share. The Consumer Product Safety Commission issues hundreds of recalls every year, and Phoenix-area hospitals treat injuries from recalled products on a routine basis: e-bike battery fires, ATV rollovers, defective infant sleepers, contaminated dietary supplements. If a product is sold nationwide, there’s a Phoenix victim somewhere in the data.
Product liability claims can arise from almost any consumer product. The categories we see most often:
After a product injury, the manufacturer’s insurer will often contact you and ask for a recorded statement. You are not legally required to give one.
Don’t. Not yet. Anything you say can and will be used to minimize your claim later. A casual “yeah, I think I might have been holding it sideways” becomes “claimant admitted to misusing the product” in their case file three months later. The adjuster’s job is to close your claim cheaply. Yours is to make sure that doesn’t happen.
Get the adjuster’s name and direct line, tell them any further communication will go through your attorney, and call us before you say another word.
It helps enormously, but it’s not always required. If you still have the product, preserve it. Don’t throw it out, don’t return it for a refund, don’t let the manufacturer take it back for “inspection.” If the product has already been destroyed, scrapped, or returned, the case is harder but not impossible. Photos, medical records, purchase records, and witness statements can sometimes substitute. The first call to a lawyer should happen before you lose access to the product.
Yes. A recall is helpful evidence (it shows the manufacturer knew about the defect) but it does not automatically pay your damages. You still have to prove the defect caused your injury and quantify the harm. Manufacturers often offer minimal cash settlements in connection with recalls. Those settlements are typically far below the value of an actual injury claim and almost always require you to sign a release of all future claims. Don’t sign anything before talking to a lawyer.
You may still have a claim. Arizona applies pure comparative fault, so user fault doesn’t automatically bar recovery for ordinary negligence claims (statutory exceptions exist for intentional conduct and certain felony situations). The bigger question is whether your use was foreseeable. Manufacturers are required to design and warn for reasonably foreseeable misuse, not just textbook-perfect use. We see “misuse” defenses fail in cases where the alleged misuse was something the manufacturer should have anticipated.
It depends on the severity of your injuries, the quality of the evidence, the manufacturer’s conduct, and whether punitive damages are in play. Reported settlements involving full recovery from minor injuries often fall in the $15,000 to $75,000 range. Cases involving surgery and lasting impairment run from $100,000 to $500,000. Catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases reported in Arizona have exceeded $1 million. Every case is fact-specific, and prior outcomes do not predict future ones.
No. Our team handles product liability cases on a contingency fee basis: no attorney’s fees unless we recover money for you. Case costs (expert witness fees, filing fees, deposition costs) are advanced by the firm and recovered out of any settlement, not billed to you out of pocket. The free case review is also genuinely free, with no obligation to hire us.
Yes. Under A.R.S. § 12-681(2), the retailer is part of the chain of distribution and can be named as a defendant under strict liability. Whether the retailer stays in the case long-term depends on whether the manufacturer steps up to indemnify, but naming the retailer is often strategically important for keeping the case in Arizona court.
A regular personal injury case (like a car accident) usually involves negligence by an individual. A product liability case involves a defective product, which means the defendant is typically a corporation, the discovery process is more complex, and expert witnesses (engineers, biomechanical experts, regulatory specialists) play a much bigger role. Damages categories are similar (medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering), but the path to proving the case is different. For background on related concepts, our Phoenix personal injury FAQ covers the basics that apply to both.
If a defective product hurt you or someone in your family, the manufacturer’s insurer is already building their file. The longer you wait, the more leverage they accumulate. Evidence disappears. Witnesses forget. The two-year statute of limitations keeps moving.
Free case review: (602) 345-1818. We answer 24/7. No fee unless we recover.
Impact Legal Car Accident Attorneys
16202 N Cave Creek Rd Suite D, Phoenix, AZ 85032
(602) 345-1818
By Jared J. Pehrson | Impact Legal Car Accident Attorneys