An AI estimate typically works by taking a few incident details—injury location, treatment intensity, and whether the bite caused lasting effects—and mapping those inputs to a broad compensation range.
In Manor, that “broad range” can mislead for two common reasons:
- Local facts don’t fit the form. Real disputes often turn on how the dog was secured, what the owner knew, and what happened immediately before the bite.
- Texas claims depend on documentation. Even if your injury sounds similar to someone else’s, your settlement value usually follows what your medical records, photographs, and witness information can prove.
Think of a calculator as a starting point—useful for understanding categories, but not a replacement for evidence-based legal evaluation.


