The goal isn’t to “solve the case” overnight—it’s to preserve what insurance and investigators will need later.
- Get checked promptly. Even if you think you’re okay, injuries like concussions, soft-tissue damage, and fractures can worsen. A medical visit also strengthens the connection between the crash and your symptoms.
- Document the scene while you still can. Take photos of traffic signals, lane position, signage, road debris, skid marks, and where your bike ended up.
- Write down your timeline. Note the direction you were traveling, what you remember about turn signals/traffic flow, lighting conditions, and any near-misses.
- Avoid long statements to insurers. In Lehi, like anywhere in Utah, adjusters may use your words to narrow liability or claim your injuries weren’t caused by the crash.
- Save everything. Keep receipts, repair estimates, helmet/bike protection costs, and any messages related to the incident.
If you’re tempted to try a bicycle accident legal chatbot to “figure it out,” use it only as a checklist. Real case strategy still requires a lawyer’s judgment—especially when fault is disputed.


