Most calculators (including AI tools) work by asking for inputs—burn type, treatment, time missed from work, and visible scarring—and then producing a rough range. That’s helpful for planning questions, but it’s not a legal valuation.
In real burn cases, value hinges on evidence that calculators can’t access:
- Exact burn depth and location (which affects treatment and long-term outcomes)
- Whether there were complications (infection, nerve pain, graft issues, restricted motion)
- Medical documentation quality (photos, operative notes, follow-ups, therapy records)
- How the injury affected day-to-day function (return-to-work limits, hand sensitivity, mobility)
If your injury occurred near a busy roadway, at an industrial workplace, or during a home repair, insurers often focus on whether the documented treatment matches the story of how the burn happened. A tool can’t authenticate causation—it can only help you organize details for your attorney.


