Online tools can only work with the limited details you type in. They usually don’t account for how liability is argued in Wisconsin, or how facts are shaped by local circumstances—like whether the bite happened during a busy summer weekend, near a park trail, at a rental, or in a residential yard where the dog’s history is disputed.
Instead of treating any calculator output as a number you’ll receive, use it as a planning tool to ask better questions:
- What medical documentation will support the injury severity?
- What evidence exists about the dog’s behavior and the owner’s responsibility?
- Are there gaps that could let the defense argue “no causation” or “comparative fault”?


