Online tools generally use your inputs—injury type, treatment timeline, and basic crash facts—to produce a rough range. That’s helpful when you’re trying to plan financially while you recover.
But in Connecticut, settlement value still depends heavily on:
- Fault and causation evidence (who’s responsible and how the crash caused your specific injuries)
- Medical documentation quality (not just whether you got treatment, but whether records clearly connect treatment to the crash)
- Consistency over time (early statements, follow-up visits, and symptom reporting)
- Whether injuries affect your daily life and work function
So while a calculator may estimate totals, it typically can’t account for disputes like “you weren’t hurt that way,” “treatment was unnecessary,” or “symptoms were pre-existing.” Those disputes are common enough that they change negotiation leverage.


