AI tools typically ask for details like injury type, treatment length, medical bills, and sometimes how much pain you experienced. That can produce a range that feels concrete.
In real Texas cases, however, two things frequently change the outcome:
- Causation evidence (not just that you were harmed—whether the harm was caused by negligence)
- Documentation quality (medical records, timelines, follow-up notes, imaging, prescriptions, and the “why” behind decisions)
If your medical history includes complicating factors—common in real life—AI may not handle that nuance consistently. And if records are incomplete or inconsistent, the estimate can swing in the wrong direction.


