AI tools typically ask for basic details—injury type, treatment timeline, and medical expenses—and then apply simplified math to guess a range.
In real cases in Saratoga Springs, the facts that most affect value often aren’t just “medical”—they’re logistical and documentary:
- Seasonal timing and follow-up gaps: delays in getting specialty appointments (or missing them due to work and family constraints) can affect how damages are documented.
- ER-to-specialist transitions: many complications become clear only after a referral, imaging, or a second opinion.
- Work and commute impacts: even when a patient is not permanently disabled, missed time and functional limits can have a measurable effect on earnings and future ability.
An AI calculator may not “see” those real-world constraints, which is why it should be treated as an educational starting point—not a valuation.


