Online estimators can be useful for understanding categories of damages, but Euclid cases often hinge on details that don’t fit cleanly into a form:
- Where the bite happened matters (front yards, apartment common areas, sidewalks, or a neighbor’s property).
- Who was the injured person matters (children on routines, visitors, delivery workers, or walkers near busy corridors).
- Ohio documentation standards matter—injuries must be supported by medical records, billing, and consistent accounts.
- Insurance timing matters—adjusters may ask for statements early, before your treatment plan is clear.
A calculator can’t review wound descriptions, treatment necessity, or whether the defense argues the bite was unforeseeable or caused by provocation.


