AI tools are built to generate a rough range using details you enter—like where the bite occurred, the type of treatment you received, and whether the wound required follow-up care.
But a calculator can’t see the evidence that New York adjusters and attorneys rely on, such as:
- whether medical notes clearly describe the bite injury and timeline
- whether photos match the wound described in treatment records
- whether a witness account supports how the dog behaved
- whether the dog’s owner had notice of aggression (or the lack of it)
In other words, use an AI estimate to organize your questions—not to assume it will match what a claim is worth after evidence review.


