Online tools can be a starting point, but they often assume a “typical” crash and a “typical” recovery. In Lilburn, the details that matter most—intersection timing, lane position, traffic patterns, and the quality of early documentation—can be hard to capture in a form.
In practice, insurers evaluate:
- Fault and causation (who’s legally responsible for the crash and how it caused your injuries)
- Medical proof (diagnoses, treatment records, and whether your complaints are consistent over time)
- Credibility and documentation (what was reported, when, and how well it matches the evidence)
- The injury impact (not just what you were diagnosed with, but how it affected your day-to-day life and ability to work)
That’s why a number generated by AI usually can’t predict your settlement the way a lawyer can after reviewing your crash evidence and medical timeline.


