Online tools often work like this: you enter a few facts (bite location, treatment type, whether there are scars), and you receive a broad estimate. That can be useful for education, especially right after an injury.
But a calculator can’t access the things that typically move value in real Trenton cases, such as:
- whether the bite was witnessed or captured on video
- how quickly you sought treatment (infection risk matters)
- whether your medical notes describe function limits (not just skin damage)
- how consistently your story matches the documentation
- whether the defense attempts to shift blame
In other words, a calculator may approximate categories of harm; an attorney evaluates proof and liability before you accept anything.


