In Lewisville, many people use an AI calculator after receiving a quick call from an insurer or after realizing they may need more care than first expected. That’s understandable—but it’s important to know what these tools do well:
- They organize facts you can later use with a lawyer.
- They help you anticipate categories of damages (medical bills, lost wages, scarring concerns, and non-economic harm).
- They reduce uncertainty while you gather records.
What an AI tool can’t do is replace a lawyer’s evaluation of:
- Whether the owner can credibly dispute fault.
- How your treatment records support causation and severity.
- Whether the injury is likely to leave long-term effects.
- How Texas claim timelines and evidence expectations affect leverage.
Bottom line: treat an AI estimate as a planning tool—not a prediction of what you’ll actually recover.


