This work presents a comprehensive and in-depth investigation of spall damage behaviors of bainitic and martensitic steels involving phase transitions. Plate-impact experiments, postmortem characterizations, molecular dynamics simulations considering realistic microstructures of bainitic and martensitic steels, and one-dimensional hydrodynamics simulations incorporating phase transition and spall damage are conducted and investigated. Origins of the multiple spall planes and their characteristics within steels are elucidated. Both steels exhibit a quasi-cleavage fracture mode involving phase transitions, with damage morphologies dependent on the microstructures and validated by molecular dynamics simulations. One-dimensional hydrodynamics simulations successfully replicate the dynamic spallation evolutions in steels considering phase transitions.