Herriman’s mix of newer residential areas, busy commuting corridors, and frequent construction/road changes can make rideshare incidents harder to document and harder for insurers to accept.
Common local circumstances we see include:
- Crashes near fast-merge lanes and higher-speed arterial roads, where “it happened too fast” arguments get used to minimize responsibility.
- Intersections with changing traffic patterns (turn lanes, signal timing updates, temporary signage), where adjusters may claim confusion or “shared fault.”
- Pickup/drop-off moments near shopping, schools, or community areas, where roadway visibility and pedestrian presence can become disputed.
- Construction zones and detours, where insurers may argue the ride driver was “just following the route,” even if driving decisions contributed to the collision.
When these details are missing—or recorded inaccurately early—your claim can be undervalued even if you were seriously hurt.


