Online tools often generate a range based on broad categories (like treatment length or visible scarring). In real Lynbrook cases, the value of a claim usually turns on details that don’t fit neatly into a generic estimate—especially when the incident happens in everyday local settings:
- Busy pedestrian areas and crosswalks: If the bite occurred when someone was walking to a bus or stopping near traffic, insurers may argue the incident was “unexpected” or that the person was not where they should have been.
- Backyard and side-yard access: In tight residential layouts, disputes can arise about whether the dog was properly secured.
- Neighbors and shared property boundaries: Even without a formal “prior incident,” evidence may show the owner knew (or should have known) about aggressive behavior.
A calculator can’t evaluate those fact patterns. A lawyer can.


