Georgia product liability allows recovery for injuries caused by defective products. Theories: Strict liability under O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11. SOL: 2 years from injury.
Published May 6, 2026
## Product liability claims in Georgia
When a defective product injures someone, **product liability law** lets the injured person recover from the manufacturer, distributor, retailer, or sometimes other parties in the supply chain. Each state's exact framework varies.
### Georgia framework
- **Theory of liability:** Strict liability under O.C.G.A. § 51-1-11
- **Statute of limitations:** 2 years from injury
- **Statute of repose:** 10-year repose
## Three theories of product liability
**1. Strict liability.** The product was defective when it left the manufacturer's hands, and the defect caused the injury. The plaintiff doesn't have to prove negligence — only the defect and causation. Most states have adopted this through Restatement (Second) § 402A or its state equivalent.
**2. Negligence.** The manufacturer or seller failed to use reasonable care in design, manufacture, or warning. Requires proving the duty of care, breach, causation, and damages.
**3. Breach of warranty.** The product violated express warranties (advertised claims) or implied warranties (merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose) under the Uniform Commercial Code.
Most product cases plead all three.
## Three types of defects
**Manufacturing defect.** The product was supposed to be safe but a particular unit was made wrong (a bottle that wasn't sealed, a brake that was incorrectly installed, a pacemaker with a flawed weld).
**Design defect.** The product line was designed in an unreasonably dangerous way. Two competing tests:
- **Consumer expectations test** — would the product fail the expectations of the ordinary consumer?
- **Risk-utility test** — does the risk outweigh the utility, given a reasonable alternative design?
**Warning / failure-to-warn defect.** The product is dangerous in ways the user wasn't adequately warned about.
## Who can be sued
- **Manufacturer** — usually the deepest pocket and most foreseeably liable
- **Component-part manufacturer** — if a specific part caused the injury
- **Designer** — even if separate from the manufacturer
- **Wholesaler / distributor**
- **Retailer** — strict liability still applies in most states
- **Lessor** — for leased products
- **Successor entity** — if the original manufacturer is gone
Some states have **innocent retailer** statutes that shield non-manufacturer sellers when the manufacturer is solvent and amenable to suit.
## Common product-liability scenarios
- **Defective vehicles** — airbags, seatbelts, fuel-tank fires, rollover propensity
- **Defective medical devices** — hip implants, transvaginal mesh, IVC filters, hernia mesh, pacemakers
- **Defective drugs** — failure to warn of side effects, contamination, mislabeled doses
- **Defective consumer products** — appliances, tools, toys, furniture, child seats
- **Industrial equipment** — machinery without guards, defective forklifts
- **Asbestos** — historical defective products causing mesothelioma decades later
- **Glyphosate / Roundup** — agricultural chemicals causing cancer claims
- **Talc** — baby powder ovarian cancer claims
## Defenses to product-liability claims
- **Comparative fault** — the plaintiff misused the product or contributed to the injury
- **Assumption of risk** — the plaintiff knowingly used a product despite obvious dangers
- **Sophisticated user / learned intermediary** — the user (or doctor/employer) knew the risks
- **Government compliance / preemption** — federal regulations preempt state-law claims (medical-device preemption is significant)
- **Statute of limitations / repose** — case filed too late
- **Substantial alteration** — the product was modified after leaving the manufacturer
- **State of the art** — design represented the safest possible at the time
## Statutes of repose
Many states have a **statute of repose** — a hard deadline from the date of FIRST SALE, separate from the SOL on injury. After repose runs (typically 8-15 years), the manufacturer is immune even for newly-occurring injuries. This is why long-latency injuries (asbestos, slow-developing cancers from defective drugs) can be problematic.
## Class actions and MDL
Major product cases often consolidate into:
- **Class actions** — single judgment binds class of similarly-situated plaintiffs
- **Multidistrict litigation (MDL)** — federal cases consolidated for pretrial proceedings
- **Mass torts** — coordinated state-court litigation
Joining one of these may be the realistic path for moderate individual cases.
## Damages
- **Medical expenses** — past, present, and future
- **Lost wages and earning capacity**
- **Pain and suffering**
- **Emotional distress**
- **Permanent impairment / disfigurement**
- **Wrongful death damages** for fatal cases
- **Punitive damages** for malicious or reckless misconduct (capped in many states)
## What you should do
If you've been hurt by a product in Georgia: preserve the product itself (don't throw it away or send it to the manufacturer for repair), photograph it, save the packaging and instructions, get medical care, and contact a product-liability attorney quickly. Most Georgia product-liability attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency. Time-sensitive evidence preservation (defective product, scene, related items) is critical.
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*This guide is general information about Georgia law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Product-liability law has many edge cases (federal preemption, learned-intermediary doctrine, state-specific statutory limits) that change the analysis. Talk to a licensed Georgia attorney about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.