Glyphosate exposure claims don’t usually start with a lab test—they start with a pattern people recognize in their own lives. In and around Dover, Delaware, common situations include:
- Lawn and landscaping routines: mixing and applying weed killer at home, using backpack sprayers, or treating areas repeatedly during spring and summer.
- Property maintenance and shared spaces: exposure after community or nearby property spraying—especially where residents walk, mow, or maintain areas soon after treatment.
- Roadside and right-of-way work: people who help maintain properties near roads or who work around areas where vegetation is controlled.
- Secondhand exposure at home: residue carried on work boots, clothing, tools, or vehicles used for outdoor maintenance.
- Delayed realization after diagnosis: when a cancer diagnosis (or another serious condition) leads a patient or family to look back at herbicide use and timing.
Even when the exposure seems “everyday,” the legal question is whether the evidence can support a credible link between how glyphosate was present and the injury you’re facing.


