Online tools typically take a few details (age, employment, relationship, and expenses) and produce a rough range. That can help you organize questions—but it can’t account for the issues that decide most outcomes in real cases.
In Heber, the settlement value often turns on questions like:
- Was the fatal incident tied to a specific driver/party’s action (speed, lane positioning, distraction, impairment, failure to yield) rather than broader road conditions?
- Were there multiple contributing causes? In mixed-fault scenarios, insurers often reduce offers.
- What documentation exists while it’s still retrievable? Crash data, traffic camera footage, and witness statements may become harder to obtain as days pass.
- How do Utah’s procedural rules and deadlines affect what can be pursued? A case can be weakened if key steps aren’t taken promptly.
Because of that, a calculator should be treated as a starting point—not a prediction.


