Online tools often work from general injury patterns. In Pleasant View, that can be especially misleading when:
- Your burn happened in a residential setting where multiple parties may be involved (tenant, landlord, property manager, contractor).
- The incident occurred during a commute-to-work routine or jobsite shift, and your time off work becomes a major evidence issue.
- You’re dealing with suburban home hazards—space heaters, water heaters, grills, dryers, and other common ignition sources.
- Your injury includes both burns and smoke/airway effects, which can complicate documentation.
If an AI tool suggests a number that feels too low, it may be missing key details like grafting, prolonged therapy, or documented functional limits. If it feels too high, it may be assuming severity that your medical records don’t yet confirm.
The practical takeaway: use the estimate as a starting point for gathering documentation—not as a substitute for a legal evaluation.


