Most calculators work by asking for basic information—your injuries, treatment, and time away from work—and then using general legal assumptions to create a range. In real Twin Falls cases, insurers and attorneys look at the same categories, but with much more detail.
Your estimate is usually driven by:
- Documented medical care (ER visits, follow-up appointments, imaging, therapy)
- Functional impact (how the injury affects walking, driving, sleep, work duties, and daily activities)
- Work loss proof (pay stubs, employer letters, restrictions from your doctor)
- Crash evidence quality (photos, witness statements, reports, and consistency in the story)
- Comparative fault risk (arguments that you were partly responsible)
Because online tools can’t review your medical records, imaging, or the specifics of the crash scene, the “number” you see should be treated as a planning tool, not a prediction.


