Burn injuries often look manageable in the first days. In the days after a hot-liquid spill, a workplace flash, or a kitchen grease incident, the skin may be treated, bandaged, and sent home. But burn severity can evolve—blistering can worsen, infection can develop, and scarring may become more prominent as healing progresses.
That’s why an automated estimate can feel wrong. A tool can’t review your medical photos, operative notes, or the functional limitations you face when you try to return to work. In Texas, insurers commonly look for consistency between the incident report, the treatment timeline, and the medical record—so gaps and premature conclusions can hurt value.


