People contact a Roundup lawyer after recognizing patterns like these:
- Acreage and property spraying: Homeowners and contractors may apply weed control along fences, driveways, or wooded edges—sometimes more than once in a season.
- Landscaping, groundskeeping, and maintenance work: Workers may handle mixing, spraying, cleanup, and equipment storage.
- Residue on clothing and gear: Household members can be exposed when work clothes aren’t fully separated or when tools are stored near living areas.
- Seasonal symptom timing: Some individuals notice symptoms worsening months or years after repeated applications or after working near areas being treated.
What matters is documenting how and when exposure occurred in your specific situation—because Washington claims require more than suspicion. They require a defensible connection between the product exposure and the illness.


