Online tools generally build a rough range from injury categories and treatment timing. That can be a helpful starting point—but Plainview cases frequently turn on proof issues, not just wound severity.
Common reasons estimates miss the mark include:
- Conflicting accounts about what happened right before the bite (leash control, boundary behavior, whether the dog was provoked).
- Delayed documentation of pain, function limits, or follow-up care after the first visit.
- Incomplete witness information—especially when incidents occur near parks, along residential streets, or during routine errands.
- Texas claim handling pressure: insurers may ask for quick statements or push “minor injury” narratives before they have your full medical picture.
An estimate can’t evaluate how persuasive your evidence is, how clearly your medical records connect the bite to your symptoms, or whether the owner had notice of the dog’s behavior.


