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A fireworks injury can turn a summer night in Michigan into an emergency in seconds. One moment you are in a backyard in Okemos, at a lake cottage near Higgins Lake, or watching a postgame show outside Jackson Field in Lansing. The next, you are dealing with burns, eye trauma, hearing loss, or a trip to the emergency room that never should have happened.
Published: June 29, 2026
By: Ben Hall | Attorney and Owner of Ben Hall Law | Marine Corps and Iraq War Veteran | Former Police Officer | Former Prosecutor
If you were hurt by fireworks in Michigan, your case usually comes down to a few practical questions. Who controlled the fireworks? Where were they used? Was someone breaking a local rule? Was the product defective? And can the evidence connect your injury to a person, property owner, company, or event?
This is where many people get stuck. Firework injuries do not always fit into one neat legal box. Some cases are ordinary negligence claims. Some are product-liability cases. Some involve both. If you want a fair recovery, you need to sort that out early and preserve proof before the scene changes, the debris gets thrown away, and witnesses stop answering their phones.
Michigan sees heavy fireworks use around the Fourth of July, New Year’s Eve, and major summer weekends. From neighborhoods in East Lansing and Haslett to big crowds near the Detroit Riverwalk and Grand Haven waterfront, fireworks are everywhere when the weather turns warm.
The risk is not small. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission reported 11 fireworks-related deaths in 2024 and an estimated 14,700 injuries nationwide. That injury estimate was about 52% higher than in 2023. The most common body parts hurt were hands and fingers at 36%, followed by head, face, and ears at 22%. Burns accounted for 37% of emergency room visits.
Those figures matter because they match what many injury claims look like in real life. A person loses grip on a mortar tube. A roman candle tips over toward a crowd. A bottle rocket is launched near parked cars and patio furniture. A device explodes too soon. A firework seems dead, then reignites when someone approaches it.
After a paragraph like that, it helps to keep the injury patterns clear:
Michigan law gives local governments power to regulate the ignition, discharge, and use of consumer fireworks, including hours of use, under MCL 28.457. That same law limits what local units can regulate in other areas, including sale and distribution. It also preserves certain date and time windows when local governments may not restrict consumer-fireworks use, including June 29 through July 4 until 11:45 p.m.
That means your case may turn on where the fireworks were discharged and whether a city, township, or village rule was violated. Lansing, East Lansing, Detroit suburbs, lakeside towns, and small villages across Mid-Michigan may all approach fireworks enforcement a little differently within the bounds of state law.
A local ordinance violation does not guarantee you win a civil case, but it can matter a lot. If the person who discharged the fireworks was using them at prohibited hours, too close to neighboring property, or in an otherwise restricted way, that fact may support a negligence claim. Michigan law also says a violation of an ordinance adopted under this section carries a civil fine of $1,000 for each violation. That does not pay your medical bills by itself, though it can be strong evidence that the conduct was unsafe.
Here is the simple way to think about it: liability usually follows control.
| Situation | Possible liable party | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Backyard guest lights fireworks without permission | Guest, and sometimes host | The guest controlled the ignition; the host may share fault if they allowed unsafe use |
| Homeowner organizes a fireworks display for guests | Homeowner, renter, or both | Control of the property and the activity can create a duty to act reasonably |
| Firework malfunctions and explodes early | Manufacturer, distributor, retailer, user | This may become a product-liability claim, not just a negligence case |
| Apartment complex common area injury | Property manager, landlord, user | Control over the area and knowledge of dangerous activity matter |
| Public show injury at a festival or stadium | Contractor, vendor, organizer, maybe public entity | Permit issues, contractor conduct, and immunity rules can change the analysis |
| Child is hurt by fireworks left accessible on property | Adult who stored them, property owner, parent or supervisor | Foreseeability and supervision become central |
flowchart TD
A[Fireworks injury in Michigan] --> B{What caused the injury?}
B --> C[Unsafe use by person]
B --> D[Dangerous property condition]
B --> E[Defective firework]
C --> F[Negligence claim]
D --> G[Premises liability or negligence]
E --> H[Product liability claim]
F --> I[Who had control, permission, or violated a local ordinance?]
G --> J[Who owned, occupied, or managed the property?]
H --> K[Who made, sold, distributed, or labeled the product?]
If you were injured at a home, apartment complex, festival, or neighborhood event in Lansing, East Lansing, Okemos, Haslett, or anywhere in Michigan, get legal advice before the evidence disappears. A fast review can tell you whether the claim points to negligence, premises liability, product liability, or all three.
Property owners are not automatically responsible every time someone gets hurt on their land. Still, they can be liable when they allow dangerous conduct, ignore obvious risks, or create conditions that make an injury more likely.
Think about a July party near Lake Lansing. The host knows guests are firing mortars from a sloped driveway near vehicles, children, and dry brush. No one marks off a safety zone. No water source is nearby. Alcohol is flowing. A tube tips over and launches toward the crowd. In that setting, the host may face a serious negligence claim because the risk was plain and the event was under their control.
The same idea can show up in rental homes and apartment communities. A landlord or property manager in East Lansing may not be responsible for every personal act of a tenant, but liability can change if management knew people were repeatedly using fireworks in common areas and failed to respond. That can matter near dense student housing, condo developments, or townhouse communities where one person’s firework can affect dozens of neighbors.
Commercial property can create another layer. If you were hurt outside a restaurant patio, at a bar event, or near a stadium promotion, there may be multiple insurance policies involved. A business owner, event organizer, fireworks contractor, or security vendor may each control part of the scene. That is why early investigation matters.
When property owner responsibility is in play, lawyers usually look for facts like these:
Not every firework injury happens because someone acted carelessly. Sometimes the device itself fails. A fuse burns too quickly. A shell explodes in the tube. Packaging misstates the safe distance. A device is mislabeled for backyard use when it behaves more like a commercial explosive.
When that happens, your case may become a Michigan product-liability action. That is a different track from a basic negligence claim against a host or neighbor. The focus shifts to the firework’s design, manufacture, packaging, warnings, and distribution chain.
Michigan law matters here in a very specific way. Under MCL 600.2948, a defendant in a product-liability action can use evidence that warnings or instructions were provided before the injury and gave notice of material risks. Michigan law also says a manufacturer is not liable for failure to warn about a danger that is obvious to a reasonably prudent product user or common knowledge to someone in a similar position.
That rule cuts both ways. A company may argue everyone knows fireworks can burn you. You may respond that your injury came from a risk that was not obvious at all, like a premature explosion, unstable base, missing safety instruction, or mislabeled launch direction. In many product cases, the details matter more than the general danger.
You should also know that product-liability claims can involve statutory limits on noneconomic damages under Michigan law. That is one reason it is important to identify all viable defendants. A claim against a careless host may be treated differently from a claim against a manufacturer or seller.
If you think the firework was defective, do not throw anything away. Keep the unused fireworks from the same package, the receipt, packaging, instructions, launch tube, debris, and photos of the scene. Those items may become central proof later.
Most fireworks claims are won or lost on evidence quality, not outrage. You may know someone acted irresponsibly. That is not enough by itself. You need proof that ties your injury to the event, the product, the property, and the people involved.
This is especially true after holiday weekends. Cleanup happens fast. Backyards get hosed down. Burned packaging goes in the trash. Security footage gets overwritten. Group chats disappear. Insurance adjusters start asking for recorded statements before you have a full picture of what happened.
The strongest claims usually include a mix of medical, physical, and witness evidence:
timeline
title Michigan Fireworks Injury Claim Evidence Timeline
Day 0 : Get emergency care
: Photograph injuries and scene
: Save firework debris and packaging
Day 1-3 : Report incident to property owner or organizer
: Identify witnesses
: Request police or fire reports
Week 1-2 : Follow medical treatment
: Preserve work-loss records
: Avoid casual statements to insurers
Month 1+ : Review liability theories
: Value damages
: Negotiate or file suit if needed
A practical local example helps. If you were hit by a misfired shell after a Lansing Lugnuts fireworks event, surveillance, employee statements, ticket records, contractor agreements, and EMS response logs may matter. If you were injured at a cottage near Torch Lake or a private home in Grand Rapids, the key proof may be phone video, neighbors, packaging, and homeowner’s insurance information.
If you are already hearing from an insurance adjuster, slow down. Before giving a recorded statement or signing anything, talk with a Michigan firework injury lawyer who can identify the right claim path and protect the evidence that gives your case value.
Even when someone else was careless, the defense may still argue that you share blame. Michigan comparative fault rules can reduce the money you recover if your own conduct contributed to the injury.
That argument shows up often in fireworks cases because insurers like to say the injured person was too close, ignored warnings, handled a dud, was drinking, or helped set up the device. Those facts do not automatically kill your case, but they can change its value.
Say you were invited to a backyard party in suburban Detroit near Royal Oak or Troy. The host told everyone to stay back 100 feet, but the launch area was not marked and the device was pointed toward the crowd. If you moved closer, the insurer will highlight that. Your lawyer will focus on the host’s poor setup, lack of barriers, unstable surface, and unsafe direction of fire. That push and pull is where real cases are decided.
This is why your own words matter. A casual text saying “I knew it was sketchy lol” can become an exhibit. So can a social media clip that seems harmless until it is used to argue you accepted the risk. You should be careful about what you post and what you tell the other side.
The legal process feels less overwhelming when you know what usually happens next. While every case is different, many follow the same basic path.
After the injury, the claim often moves through these stages:
One major issue in fireworks cases is that defendants may point fingers at each other. The host blames the guest who lit the device. The guest blames the manufacturer. The manufacturer blames misuse. The property owner blames a vendor. This is normal, not unusual. Your job is to act fast enough that the proof still exists when those arguments begin.
If you want to know what your case may actually be worth, ask for a focused case review. You should know who may be liable, what insurance may apply, and what evidence needs to be locked down before the holiday cleanup erases it.
Michigan’s general limitations period for actions to recover damages for injury to a person or property is three years after the injury, under the 2018 legislation amending the statute of limitations framework. That sounds like a long time. It is not.
A fireworks injury claim can require immediate work long before that deadline. Witnesses move. Physical evidence degrades. Video gets deleted. Retail records disappear. If a public entity is involved, different notice rules and immunity issues may apply. If a minor child was injured, timing questions can get more complicated. Fast action gives you options.
Your damages may include both economic and noneconomic losses. Economic losses are the easier part to count: hospital bills, surgeries, follow-up care, prescriptions, lost wages, future treatment, travel for care, and damaged property. Noneconomic damages cover the human side of the injury, including pain, scarring, emotional distress, reduced quality of life, and the daily frustration that follows a serious burn or eye injury.
Fireworks cases often involve visible injuries, which can make documentation even more important. Scarring on your hands or face may affect work, confidence, and daily comfort long after the holiday is over. Hearing damage can impact sleep, concentration, and conversation. Eye injuries can change everything in a single night.
When the case involves a child, the impact may stretch years into the future. Growth, repeat procedures, school disruption, and emotional harm all need careful attention. A fast settlement rarely accounts for that.
Yes, you may have a claim if a homeowner, renter, guest, or other person acted negligently. Liability often depends on who controlled the fireworks, whether the use was unsafe, and whether the property owner allowed a dangerous setup.
Not by itself, but it can be strong evidence. If someone used consumer fireworks at a prohibited time or in violation of a local ordinance, that fact may help show they acted unreasonably and created a foreseeable risk.
That may point to a product-liability claim. Save the packaging, debris, receipt, instructions, and any unused fireworks from the same package. Those details can help show a defect in design, manufacturing, or warning.
Many personal injury claims in Michigan are subject to a three-year deadline, though some cases involve exceptions or different rules. You should not wait, especially if a product defect, child injury, or public event is involved.
You may still have a claim, though your recovery can be reduced under comparative fault rules. The other side will often try to shift blame, so the facts around distance, warnings, supervision, and setup matter a lot.
Often, yes. Many private property claims are handled through homeowner’s or renter’s insurance. Commercial events may involve business liability policies, and product cases may involve manufacturer or distributor coverage.
You should be careful. Early statements can lock you into facts before you know the full extent of your injuries or who is actually responsible. A lawyer can help you avoid giving the other side arguments they did not have before.
If your injury happened during a fireworks show, at a neighborhood party, or because a firework failed the moment it was lit, your next steps matter. Getting treatment, preserving proof, and identifying the right legal theory can make the difference between a claim that gets dismissed and one that gets taken seriously.