The purpose of this study is to illuminate the changeover process experienced by people with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and increases the understanding of social recognition occurring after injury. Fifteen persons, ageds 28-56, with TBI have been in-depth interviewed. Data were first analysed by latent-content analysis using a hermeneutic approach, and later re-contextualised within a matrix constructed from theories of social recognition. Results were initially structured into six themes and then re-described in terms of recognition, i.e. the individual dimension, the legal dimension and the value dimension. The conclusions suggest that people with TBI experience both recognition and non-recognition during the recovery process and later in life, living in society with the sequel of TBI. Such experiences are described on all dimensions.