Utah County has its share of serious collisions and slip-and-fall risks tied to commuting patterns—fast turn lanes, late braking, distracted driving, and winter- or weather-related hazards. When a TBI happens, the early story can sound simple (“I felt dizzy”), but the claim value often depends on what medical records show next.
In Lindon, adjusters frequently look for consistency across:
- The timeline (symptoms, treatment, follow-ups)
- Objective documentation (clinic notes, imaging when available, concussion clinic evaluations)
- Functional proof (how symptoms affected driving, work performance, and household tasks)
- Causation (whether symptoms were linked to the incident versus another condition)
That’s where an “estimate” can mislead. A tool may produce a range based on general patterns, but insurers evaluate your record—especially when brain injury symptoms are partly invisible.


