Utah Car Accident Injury Claim | Free Case Review | AutoAccidentClaim
Utah accident victim? Serious injuries go beyond PIP — get full compensation: (877) 878-0423
(877) 878-0423
Utah Accident Injury Victims

Utah PIP
Doesn't Cover
Everything You're
Owed

Utah is a no-fault state — meaning your PIP covers the basics regardless of who caused the crash. But serious injuries go far beyond what PIP pays. Once you meet Utah's injury threshold, you have the right to pursue the at-fault driver for everything you're actually owed. An experienced Utah injury attorney fights for the full amount — at zero cost to you.

60K+
UT Crashes in 2023
26,637
Injury Victims in 2023
4 YRS
To File — U.C.A. §78B-2-307
50%
Fault Bar — U.C.A. §78B-5-818
No fee unless you win  |  Confidential  |  No obligation

⚠ Don't let PIP be your only recovery. Utah's no-fault PIP covers basic medical bills — but if your injuries are serious, you can step outside PIP and pursue the at-fault driver for full damages including pain and suffering, long-term care, and lost earning capacity. Do not give a recorded statement before speaking with a Utah attorney.

Start Your Free Utah Case Review

Takes less than 2 minutes — 100% confidential

Please select an option.

🔒 Private & secure  |  Takes less than 2 minutes

First name is required.
Last name is required.
Valid email required.
US numbers only. Start with area code, no country code.
Please enter a valid US phone number.
Please check the consent box to continue.

Utah Roads — 60,000 Crashes And 26,000 Injury Victims In A Single Year

Utah recorded 60,021 crashes in 2023 with 26,637 injury victims. Despite being the 8th safest state nationally, that's still thousands of injured Utahns every year — many of whom never get the full compensation they're owed because they rely only on PIP.

60,021
Total crashes on Utah roads in 2023
Source: Utah Highway Safety Office Crash Facts 2023
26,637
Injury victims in Utah crashes in 2023 — 18,316 injury accidents
Source: Utah Department of Public Safety
281
Fatalities on Utah roads in 2024 — July 2024 was the worst month in state history
Source: UDOT / DPS Preliminary 2024 Report
35%
Of all deadly Utah crashes involved speeding — crashes 2.7x more likely to be fatal
Source: Utah Highway Safety Office
Salt Lake County
I-15
Most total crashes — highest volume corridor
Weber County
I-15 / I-84
2nd highest crash rate per mile traveled
Utah County
I-15 South
3rd highest — growing traffic corridor
Cache County
US-89 / US-91
4th highest crash rate in state
San Juan County
2.2%
Highest fatality rate — rural roads most deadly

The Drivers Injuring People On Utah Roads

Understanding the cause of your accident matters — because it directly affects whether you qualify to step outside Utah's no-fault system and pursue full compensation from the at-fault driver.

41%
📱

Distracted Driving

41% of fatal crashes in Georgia involved a suspected distracted driver. Texting, phone use, and inattention are the leading cause of fatal collisions in the state — and among the easiest to prove negligence on.

41% of GA fatal crashes — 2023
28%
🍺

Drunk & Impaired Driving

28% of fatal crashes involved at least one drunk driver. 23% involved drugs. DUI-related crashes spike on weekends and holidays — and in cases of gross negligence, Georgia courts may award punitive damages beyond standard compensation.

28% involved alcohol — 2023
18%
💨

Speeding

18% of fatal crashes involved a speeding driver. Speed dramatically reduces reaction time and increases crash severity. Speeding on Georgia highways like I-285, I-75, and I-85 is a major contributing factor in serious injury claims statewide.

18% of GA fatal crashes — 2023

Utah's No-Fault System Was Designed To Limit What You Collect

Utah's no-fault PIP system means your own insurer covers basic bills first. Insurers count on this keeping claims contained — but serious injuries entitle you to step outside PIP and pursue the at-fault driver for full damages. Most people never know this, and insurers aren't going to tell them.

What Utah's PIP System Limits You To
  • Offer quick settlements before your full injury costs are known
  • Record your statements to use your words against your claim
  • Try to push your fault above 50% to eliminate your recovery entirely
  • Dispute or deny long-term treatment costs
  • Pressure you to sign releases before you know your prognosis
  • Count on you not knowing Georgia's 40-day bad faith window
What a Utah Injury Attorney Does
  • Evaluates whether your injuries meet Utah's serious injury threshold
  • Handles all communication so you don't say the wrong thing
  • Documents current AND future costs — not just today's bills
  • Pursues lost wages, pain and suffering, and long-term care
  • Ensures you don't settle until injuries are properly valued
  • Works on contingency — no fee unless you win

These Injuries Qualify You To Step Outside Utah's PIP System

Utah's serious injury threshold is the key to full compensation. Injuries like these almost always qualify — meaning you can pursue the at-fault driver for everything beyond what PIP pays, including pain and suffering, long-term care, and lost earning capacity.

🧠

Traumatic Brain Injury

TBIs and concussions almost always meet Utah's serious injury threshold. They affect cognition, memory, and personality for years — and PIP will never cover the full cost of long-term neurological care.

🦴

Spinal & Back Injuries

Spinal injuries virtually always meet Utah's injury threshold. Surgery, long-term PT, and pain management costs compound over years — these are exactly the damages an attorney pursues beyond PIP.

🦵

Broken Bones & Fractures

Complex fractures typically meet Utah's serious injury threshold. Multiple surgeries, extended recovery, and reduced earning capacity are all recoverable beyond PIP — but rarely offered in initial settlements.

🩺

Soft Tissue & Whiplash

Dismissed as minor by Utah insurers, soft tissue injuries and whiplash may still meet the injury threshold with proper documentation. Chronic pain from these injuries can last years and warrants full compensation.

❤️

Internal Injuries

Internal injuries are serious, often delayed in presentation, and consistently qualify for recovery beyond PIP. Don't settle before the full picture is known — these injuries can require costly long-term treatment.

😔

Psychological Trauma

PTSD, anxiety, and depression are real, compensable damages under Georgia law — but only if properly documented. Most fast settlements don't include them at all.

What Utah Law Actually Says About Your Claim

Utah's no-fault system sounds simple — but the rules that let you step outside it and pursue full compensation are what insurers don't want you to know about.

U.C.A. §78B-2-307

4-Year Statute of Limitations

Utah gives you 4 years from the date of your accident to file a personal injury lawsuit — one of the longest windows in the country. However, claims against government entities drop to just 1 year under U.C.A. §78B-2-303. Don't let the longer window create false comfort — evidence disappears, witnesses move, and insurers use delay tactics regardless.

U.C.A. §78B-5-818

Modified Comparative Fault — 50% Bar

Utah uses modified comparative fault. If you are found 50% or more at fault, you recover nothing. Below 50%, your damages are reduced by your fault percentage. Utah insurers still aggressively try to push your fault number up — and having an attorney from day one protects your percentage from the very first interaction.

U.C.A. §31A-22-309

No-Fault PIP + Serious Injury Threshold

Utah is a no-fault state — your own PIP insurance covers basic medical bills and lost wages regardless of fault. But if your injuries are "serious" under Utah law (significant impairment, permanent disability, disfigurement, or death), you can step outside no-fault and sue the at-fault driver for full damages including pain and suffering. This threshold is the most important rule in Utah injury law.

Delayed Discovery Rule

Injuries Found Later — Discovery Rule Applies

Utah follows the discovery rule — if your injury was not immediately apparent, the 4-year clock may start from the date you knew or should have known about the harm. This is especially relevant for TBIs, spinal injuries, and soft tissue damage that surface days or weeks after a crash. An attorney ensures your claim timeline is properly protected.

5 Mistakes That Hurt Utah Claims

Utah's no-fault system and 50% fault bar create specific traps for the unprepared. Avoid these from the moment your accident happens.

01

Giving a Recorded Statement

Utah adjusters use recorded statements to argue your injuries don't meet the serious injury threshold — keeping you trapped inside PIP. You are not required to give a recorded statement. Decline politely and consult an attorney first.

02

Accepting the First Offer

A quick PIP payout feels like a resolution — but signing a release permanently closes your right to step outside no-fault and pursue full compensation. Never sign anything before an attorney reviews whether your injuries qualify for a full tort claim.

03

Delaying Medical Treatment

Gaps in medical treatment are used by Utah insurers to argue your injuries don't meet the serious injury threshold. See a doctor immediately — even if you feel fine. Delayed-onset injuries are common and must be documented promptly.

04

Relying Only on PIP

Utah's 4-year window is longer than most states — but government vehicles cut that to 1 year. Don't let the longer deadline create false comfort. Evidence disappears and insurers use delay tactics. Act early, not at the last minute.

05

Posting About the Accident

Utah insurers pull social media to dispute injury severity and argue you don't meet the serious injury threshold. Any activity photo or post can be used to minimize your claim. Keep all accident and recovery details completely off social media.

Utah's No-Fault System Isn't The End Of Your Claim

PIP covers the basics — but if your injuries are serious, you're entitled to much more. The at-fault driver's insurer is working right now to keep your claim inside PIP limits and below the serious injury threshold. Every day without an attorney is a day they're building that case. It costs you nothing to find out what you're actually owed.

Call (877) 878-0423 — Free Georgia Review

Utah Accident Claim FAQ

For most personal injury claims in Utah, you have 4 years from the date of the accident under U.C.A. §78B-2-307 — one of the longest windows in the country. However, if a government vehicle or employee was involved, the deadline drops to just 1 year under U.C.A. §78B-2-303, with strict notice requirements. Property damage claims have a 3-year limit. Don't let the 4-year window create false comfort — acting early preserves evidence and protects your case.
Not necessarily. Utah's no-fault PIP system covers basic medical bills and lost wages from your own insurer regardless of fault. But if your injuries are "serious" under U.C.A. §31A-22-309 — involving significant impairment, permanent disability, permanent disfigurement, or death — you can step outside the no-fault system and sue the at-fault driver directly for full damages including pain and suffering, long-term care, and lost earning capacity. An attorney evaluates whether your injuries meet this threshold.
Under U.C.A. §31A-22-309, Utah's serious injury threshold allows you to step outside no-fault PIP and sue the at-fault driver when your injuries involve: death, dismemberment, significant disfigurement or scarring, displaced fractures, loss of a fetus, or a permanent injury that substantially affects your ability to work or care for yourself. Many injuries that seem "moderate" in the short term — TBIs, spinal damage, severe whiplash — can qualify. An attorney reviews your medical records and advises whether you meet the threshold.
Yes, as long as your fault does not reach 50% under U.C.A. §78B-5-818. Your recovery is reduced proportionally by your fault percentage — so if you're 30% at fault and your damages are $100,000, you recover $70,000. At exactly 50% fault, you receive nothing. Fault percentages are not set at the scene — they're determined through investigation, negotiation, and sometimes litigation. An attorney challenges the insurer's fault assessments and protects your percentage.
Quite possibly, yes. PIP covers basic current medical bills and a portion of lost wages — but it does not cover pain and suffering, future treatment costs, long-term rehabilitation, or reduced earning capacity. If your injuries are serious enough to meet Utah's threshold, you may be leaving significant compensation on the table by relying only on PIP. An attorney determines whether your injuries qualify for a full tort claim and pursues every available source of recovery — at no upfront cost to you.
Not without speaking to an attorney first. Early offers are made before your full injury costs are known and before it's determined whether you meet Utah's serious injury threshold. Once you sign a release, your claim is permanently closed — even if you later need surgery or discover your injuries qualify for a full tort claim. There is no cost to getting an attorney's opinion before you sign anything.
Utah personal injury attorneys typically work on contingency — they only get paid a percentage of your recovery if your case is won or settled. You pay nothing upfront, and if the case is unsuccessful, you owe nothing in attorney's fees. Given Utah's no-fault complexity and serious injury threshold rules, there is no financial risk to getting a free case review to understand what you may actually be owed beyond PIP.

AutoAccidentClaim.com is a legal advertising service connecting injury victims with licensed attorneys in Utah. This website does not provide legal advice. Contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship. Results may vary depending on the specific facts and legal circumstances of each case. Utah injury attorneys are licensed under Utah State Bar guidelines.

Statistics sourced from the Utah Highway Safety Office Crash Facts 2023, UDOT, Utah Department of Public Safety, NHTSA, and related 2023–2024 reports. All figures cited for informational purposes.

© 2025 AutoAccidentClaim.com  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms & Conditions

Scroll to Top