Clemson has a mix of residential neighborhoods, apartments, campus-adjacent activity, and frequent visitors. That matters because dog-bite disputes often turn on context:
- Incidents near campus or busy sidewalks: insurers may argue the dog was controlled and the person was in a high-traffic area.
- Tourist and guest exposure: visitors may not have the same knowledge of the property or the dog’s history.
- Seasonal events and higher foot traffic: if the bite happened during a gathering or peak campus activity, witness accounts and timing become critical.
When you’re trying to understand potential value, the “story” of the incident—location, visibility, control, and timing—often matters as much as the wound itself.


