Online tools typically work by asking you to plug in injury details and then applying a generalized model. In real Easton cases, settlement value often shifts based on factors that calculators don’t “see,” such as:
- Whether the bite occurred in a residential setting (backyards, porches, shared property) versus a public-facing location
- Whether there’s documentation showing notice—for example, prior complaints or known aggressive behavior
- How well your medical provider’s notes connect the wound and symptoms to the dog bite
- Whether liability is likely to be challenged (for example, arguments about supervision, control, or circumstances at the time of the attack)
Because of that, treat any estimate as a planning tool—not a promise.


