Online tools can help you organize information, but they can’t review the documents that actually drive value in Washington injury claims—medical records, burn-depth findings, treatment timelines, and evidence of how the injury affects function.
In practice, residents in Kirkland run into the same issue: insurers often focus on what the burn looked like at first, not what it becomes later. Burns can worsen as swelling resolves, scarring tightens, or nerve pain and sensitivity develop. A calculator may not account for:
- delayed complications (infection, hypertrophic scarring, reduced range of motion)
- treatment that happens after the “initial healing” window
- the cost of ongoing scar management and therapy appointments
- how a burn changed your ability to perform job tasks (not just whether you missed work)
A better question than “What number will I get?” is: What evidence would make my claim stronger than the average case the tool is modeling?


