After a burn event—whether it happened at home, at work, or in a shared community space—people usually want one thing: clarity. Online tools promise an estimate based on details like burn depth, treatment, and time away from work.
In real Converse cases, though, the same two inputs can lead to very different outcomes because burns can evolve. A burn that looks manageable at first can later require additional wound care, scar management, surgery, or therapy. That matters for valuation because Texas claims often hinge on documented losses and credible proof of future needs.
So instead of asking, “What number will I get?” a better local question is:
What does my evidence support—and what does it still need?


