In a community like Gonzales, many burn cases involve situations where documentation is inconsistent—small businesses, residential landlords, rotating crews, and fast-moving incident reports. That’s important because settlement value typically rises or falls based on proof.
Instead of relying on an “AI burn injury settlement calculator” output, we focus on what insurers can verify:
- Medical records that clearly describe burn depth and progression (not just “burned skin”)
- Photos over time showing healing, scarring, or contracture risk
- Work and wage proof (missed shifts, reduced hours, modified duties)
- Causation details (how the burn happened and why the responsible party should have prevented it)
If the evidence is thin, insurers may argue the burn wasn’t as severe as you claim—or that later symptoms are unrelated. A lawyer’s job is to build a claim that matches the medical timeline.


