Many online tools produce a projected range using simplified inputs—like bite severity, treatment duration, or whether there were visible injuries. That’s useful for planning questions to ask, but it often misses what matters most to adjusters and attorneys in real Clarkston cases:
- Whether the dog owner’s notice of risk can be supported (for example, prior behavior known to the owner)
- How consistently medical records describe the wound and cause
- Whether the injury affected daily life (mobility, fear of dogs, care needs)
- How quickly the claim was reported and documented
In other words, your settlement is not just about the bite—it’s about the story your evidence can prove.


