Online tools usually work like this: you enter details, the tool generates a range, and you’re left wondering whether it matches what you’ll actually recover.
In Lawrenceville, we often see the same pattern: the offer is based on partial information—sometimes just the initial treatment—while the real case value turns on what happens next (follow-up care, wound complications, scarring, or ongoing limitations).
A calculator typically can’t account for:
- Georgia injury documentation gaps (e.g., records that don’t clearly describe the wound, function limits, or follow-up recommendations)
- Comparative blame arguments that insurers may try to build around your actions that day
- Proof of notice (whether the owner had reason to know the dog might be aggressive)
A better question than “What number will I get?” is: “What can be proven, and what does the evidence justify?”


