A generic calculator typically works like this: you enter injury details, it outputs an estimated range, and you’re left to treat that range as a likely payout.
In Draper, the problem is that dog bite outcomes often turn on details that don’t fit neatly into a form, such as:
- Whether the bite occurred in a place where a person had a normal right to be (front yard vs. restricted area)
- How quickly medical care was sought and whether the initial documentation matches the injury you later describe
- Whether witnesses or video exist (common in neighborhoods with nearby traffic, shared driveways, and park footpaths)
- Whether Utah medical records support the injury severity—especially for deeper punctures, tendon involvement, or scarring
An AI estimate may be directionally useful for planning, but it can’t replace case-specific legal analysis.


