AI tools usually work by taking your inputs (injury type, treatment timeline, severity, costs) and running them through simplified assumptions. That can produce a range that sounds realistic.
In real cases, however, settlement value depends on evidence that AI forms can’t verify—such as:
- whether the care fell below the accepted standard of care for the specific situation
- whether the provider’s actions actually caused the injury (not just whether the injury occurred)
- how well your medical records document functional limits and ongoing needs
- how convincingly the damage story is presented to the insurance carrier
So think of AI as a starting point for organizing information, not a substitute for legal review.


