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How to Verify Airbag Compatibility for Your Vehicle

Used Airbag Compatibility Guide

Airbag compatibility is more precise than almost any other auto part. The same make and model can have three different driver airbag part numbers across a single generation’s production run. Cab style changes the curtain airbag length. Trim level determines whether rear curtains and knee bags are even present. Getting any of these wrong means the airbag won’t physically mount, won’t connect to the SRS harness, or will trigger fault codes when the module detects a mismatched inflator resistance.

This guide walks through the five factors that determine airbag compatibility and explains how to verify each one before you order — so the replacement arrives ready to install, not ready to return.

FirstChoice supplies undeployed, OEM airbags — driver, passenger, side curtain — with donor vehicle documentation. 30-day warranty.

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Factor 1: Exact Year Range — SRS Generation Changes Mid-Model

Manufacturers update their SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) generation during a vehicle’s production run — sometimes mid-model year. When the SRS generation changes, the airbag connector, inflator resistance specification, and bag shape all change. An airbag from the previous generation will not connect to the new SRS harness correctly and will trigger a fault code.

VehicleSRS Generation BreakWhat Changed
Ford F-1502009 (12th gen launch)New SRS module, new connector configuration on all bag positions
Ford F-1502013 (mid-gen refresh)Driver bag updated; part number change on driver position
Ford F-1502015 (13th gen launch)Complete SRS redesign with aluminum body; no interchange with 12th gen
Chevy Silverado / GMC Sierra2007 (GMT900 launch)New SRS module and all bag part numbers from GMT800
Chevy Silverado / GMC Sierra2014 (K2XX launch)SRS redesign; no interchange with GMT900 parts
Dodge RAM 15002009 (4th gen launch)New SRS system; new part numbers for all positions
Dodge RAM 15002013 (mid-gen refresh)Airbag part numbers updated on driver/passenger positions
Toyota Tacoma2016 (3rd gen launch)New SRS system; no interchange with 2005–2015 second gen

The safest approach: Read the part number directly off the existing airbag before removal. On the driver airbag, remove the steering wheel center cover (usually 2 Torx bolts accessible from the back of the wheel) and read the label on the module. On the passenger airbag, the label is often visible on the canister edge when the dash is partially disassembled. The existing part number is the exact match — no cross-referencing required.

Factor 2: Airbag Position — Each Location Is a Different Part

Modern vehicles have 6–10 distinct airbag positions. Each has a different inflator size, bag shape, connector type, and SRS channel assignment. These are not interchangeable between positions even on the same vehicle.

PositionLocationConnector Notes
Driver airbagSteering wheel center2-wire yellow SRS connector; bag faces driver
Passenger airbagDashboard, passenger sideLarger inflator; longer connector lead; mounted in dash canister
Side curtain — driver (SAB)Roof rail, driver side, front-to-rearLength varies by cab style (regular, extended, crew)
Side curtain — passenger (SAB)Roof rail, passenger sideMirror image of driver curtain; same cab-style dependency
Seat-mounted side airbag — driverOuter bolster, driver front seatMounted inside seat back; seat must be partially disassembled
Seat-mounted side airbag — passengerOuter bolster, passenger front seatPart of seat assembly; some vehicles have optional side bags
Knee airbag — driverBelow steering column or lower dashPresent on vehicles with advanced restraint systems (post-2010 typically)
Knee airbag — passengerLower passenger dashNot present on all trim levels; check original vehicle build sheet
Rear curtain airbagRear roof railPresent on crew cab/extended cab with rear side curtain package

Factor 3: Cab Style Affects Curtain Airbag Length

Side curtain airbags run along the roof rail from the A-pillar (windshield edge) to the rear of the passenger compartment. On a regular cab (2-door) truck, the curtain covers front seats only. On an extended cab or crew cab, the curtain must extend further rearward to cover the rear seat area. These are physically longer bags with different mounting points — they are not interchangeable.

Cab ConfigurationCurtain CoverageInterchangeable With?
Regular Cab (2-door)Front seats only; shorter curtainOnly other regular cab of same model/year
Extended Cab / SuperCabFront + rear of smaller rear seat areaOnly other extended cab of same model/year
Crew Cab / SuperCrew / Double CabFull front + full rear seat; longest curtainOnly other crew cab of same model/year

Factor 4: Trim Level — Not All Vehicles Have All Airbag Positions

Base trim vehicles often have fewer airbags than higher trim levels. Seat-mounted side airbags and rear curtain airbags are frequently optional or trim-exclusive on trucks:

  • Ford F-150 (2009–2014): Side curtain airbags standard on XLT and above; not standard on base XL trim until 2012 for some configurations
  • Chevy Silverado (2007–2013): Seat-mounted side bags optional; rear curtain standard on Crew Cab LT and above
  • Dodge RAM (2009–2018): Knee airbag introduced on higher trims; base Tradesman may not have knee bag
  • Toyota Tacoma (2005–2015): Side curtains standard on all trims except base Access Cab

How to confirm which airbags your vehicle has: Look at the airbag warning labels on your sun visors. They list which positions have airbags in your specific vehicle. Also check the SRS module wiring connector — each monitored position has a corresponding wiring channel. Unoccupied channels indicate positions not present in your vehicle.

Factor 5: SRS Module Connector Resistance Matching

The SRS module monitors each airbag circuit by measuring the resistance of the squib (the inflator’s igniter). Each airbag inflator type has a specific squib resistance — typically 1.7–3.5 ohms depending on manufacturer. The SRS module compares the measured resistance to its expected value. If the replacement airbag’s squib resistance is outside the expected range, the module sets a fault code and the airbag warning light illuminates.

This is another reason part number matching matters — the same physical position on a vehicle may use airbags from different generations with different squib resistance values. Matching the part number ensures the resistance specification is correct for the module.

How to Order the Right Airbag — Step by Step

  1. Read the part number off the existing airbag first if you can access it before removal. This is the most accurate method and eliminates all compatibility guesswork.
  2. Provide your full VIN to the supplier. A supplier who cross-references your VIN against the OEM parts database will pull the correct superseding part number for your vehicle’s specific build.
  3. Specify the exact position. Don’t just say “airbag” — specify driver, passenger, side curtain driver side, side curtain passenger side, seat-mounted driver, knee airbag, etc.
  4. Confirm your cab style. Regular cab, extended/SuperCab/Access cab, or crew cab/SuperCrew/Double Cab. Critical for curtain bags.
  5. Ask the supplier to confirm the donor vehicle’s condition. The airbag must come from a vehicle where that specific position did not deploy. A driver airbag from a vehicle with only a rear collision is fine. A driver airbag from a vehicle with a frontal impact is not.
  6. Check the donor VIN for Takata recall. Ask for the donor VIN or verify NHTSA recall status before completing the order.

Common Compatibility Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

MistakeResultPrevention
Ordering by year/make/model onlyWrong SRS generation; wrong connectorAlways provide trim level and existing part number
Ignoring cab style for curtain bagsBag too short; wrong mounting pointsSpecify regular / extended / crew cab every time
Using a bag from a higher-trim vehicleSRS fault codes for unexpected resistanceMatch existing part number, not trim assumptions
Not resetting the SRS module after installAirbag warning light stays on; bag not armedSRS module reset is required — budget $80–$150
Buying from a donor vehicle with a Takata recallDangerous inflator; not truly safeRequest donor VIN; verify at NHTSA.gov before purchasing
Installing a bag with wrong squib resistanceSRS fault code; bag not armedPart number match guarantees correct resistance spec

“I needed a passenger airbag for my 2013 Silverado Crew Cab LT. FirstChoice asked for my VIN and confirmed the part number — turns out the 2013 Crew Cab LT had a different part number from the 2013 Regular Cab LT even though it’s the same model year. They matched the right unit, donor was verified, SRS module reset at my shop for $110. Light cleared, zero issues.”

— Karen L., Phoenix, AZ

Provide your VIN and airbag position — FirstChoice verifies compatibility, checks donor recall status, and ships fast. 30-day warranty.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find the correct airbag part number for my vehicle?

Read the part number directly off your existing airbag before removal — it’s on a label on the back of the driver module (behind the steering wheel center) or on the passenger airbag canister. Alternatively, provide your full VIN to a supplier who cross-references against the OEM parts database.

Are airbags vehicle-specific or can they be swapped between similar models?

Highly vehicle-specific. Airbag part numbers change between SRS generations (even mid-model year), between trim levels, and by cab style for curtain bags. A 2013 F-150 driver bag is not necessarily the same part as a 2012 or 2014 F-150 driver bag — always verify by part number.

Can I use an airbag from a higher trim model in a base trim vehicle?

Only if the part number matches and the SRS module is configured for that position. A base trim vehicle without rear curtains has an SRS module without wiring for those channels — adding rear curtains requires the matching wiring and module update. For driver/passenger bags, trim crossover can sometimes work if part numbers align — confirm before ordering.

What information do I need to order a replacement airbag?

VIN, year/make/model/trim, engine option if applicable, airbag position (driver/passenger/curtain left or right/seat-mounted/knee), cab style (regular/extended/crew), and the part number from the existing airbag if accessible.

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