Online tools typically ask for broad numbers—age, income, dependents—and then apply a simplified formula. That approach can be useful for rough expectations, but it usually misses what drives real outcomes in Utah wrongful death claims, such as:
- How the incident happened (e.g., distracted driving on commute routes, unsafe construction practices, or roadway conditions)
- Who can be held responsible (driver, employer, property owner, contractor, manufacturer, or a combination)
- What documents exist to prove the link between the event and the death
- Whether fault is shared under Utah’s comparative responsibility rules
Because of that, a calculator may generate a range that doesn’t match how evidence is actually valued in negotiation.


