Most AI settlement estimate tools work by taking a few inputs—injury severity, treatment length, and losses—and then applying generic assumptions. That can be a useful starting point.
It falls short when your case depends on facts common to Clearfield-area crashes, such as:
- Traffic merges and highway-speed impacts: Clearfield drivers frequently share roads with trucks traveling through commuting corridors, and the severity can vary dramatically based on speed and braking distance.
- Evidence gaps from busy intersections: If the crash happened near a signalized area or during heavier commuter hours, photos, dash cam footage, and witness memories can become harder to obtain later.
- Trucking-company documentation: Liability in Utah truck cases often turns on driver logs, maintenance history, and internal policies—items calculators don’t evaluate.
A number from a tool is not the same thing as a valuation grounded in your medical record, the crash report, and the trucking evidence.


