Online tools may provide general ranges, but they can’t account for the facts that Utah insurers focus on. After a dog bite, insurers usually want to see:
- A clear timeline (when the bite occurred vs. when treatment began)
- Documentation of injury severity (stitches, imaging, follow-up care)
- Consistency between what you reported and what clinicians recorded
- Evidence of control (leash/restraint, location of the incident, warnings)
- Causation (that the bite—not something else—caused the medical problem)
In Eagle Mountain, where many residents spend time on sidewalks, in neighborhood common areas, and at recreation spots, disputes often come down to whether the dog was reasonably controlled and whether the injured person was in a place they were allowed to be.


