AI tools can’t review photos from the day of the bite, confirm the depth of a wound, or evaluate whether your treatment timeline supports your injury severity.
Before you rely on any estimate, make sure you have the basics that strengthen a Tennessee dog bite claim:
- Medical records (urgent care/ER notes, wound descriptions, tetanus updates)
- Billing and receipts for treatment and follow-ups
- Photographs taken soon after the incident (if possible)
- Witness information (neighbors, bystanders, anyone who saw the dog behavior)
- Any animal control or incident report documentation
If you don’t have those yet, it’s still worth speaking with a lawyer—many details can be requested or clarified so your claim isn’t built on guesses.


