Most AI calculators work by asking for details (crash type, injury description, treatment timeline, and sometimes work impact) and then generating an estimated range based on patterns from other cases. That can help you understand which inputs tend to move the total—like emergency care costs versus longer-term treatment.
But AI tools can’t reliably account for things that frequently decide outcomes in Danbury cases, such as:
- Whether witness statements or traffic evidence clearly support how the crash happened
- How well your medical records connect the accident to your symptoms
- Whether the insurer argues pre-existing conditions or intervening causes
- Whether your injuries affect your ability to work in a way that’s realistically documented
In other words: treat an AI estimate like a planning tool, not a prediction of what Danbury insurers will offer.


