Most calculators work like this: you enter details about the incident and injury, and the tool outputs a rough compensation range. That range is usually based on generalized patterns—not the evidence your insurer will rely on.
In Suwanee, the “missing pieces” often decide whether your case values higher or lower:
- How the incident happened (a residential yard vs. a public sidewalk near a busy shopping corridor)
- Whether there’s proof of the dog’s behavior (photos, witness accounts, any animal control documentation)
- How consistent your medical records are with the timeline you describe
- Whether the bite resulted in lasting limitations (scarring, reduced function, or follow-up care)
So while an AI or online estimator can be a starting point, the settlement outcome depends on what can be proven and defended.


