Most online TBI payout calculators use simplified assumptions. They may ask for things like hospital stay length or injury severity, then spit out a range.
But in real settlements—especially in Utah—the outcome usually turns on whether you can prove, with consistent records, that:
- the accident caused the brain injury (or significantly worsened a condition), and
- the injury produced ongoing, measurable limitations—not just short-term discomfort.
For residents of Cottonwood Heights, common documentation gaps happen when people:
- return to work too soon after a concussion,
- delay specialist care because of scheduling or cost,
- describe symptoms inconsistently between visits,
- or underestimate how cognitive changes affect commute reliability, job performance, and daily safety.
A calculator can’t account for those real-world proof issues. A case evaluation can.


