Most online tools work like a rough valuation model. You enter information about:
- the crash circumstances,
- your injuries and treatment,
- and sometimes your wage loss.
From there, the tool applies generalized assumptions based on patterns in prior cases.
What it can’t do:
- determine fault in your specific crash,
- confirm whether your symptoms match the accident,
- or predict how insurers in Louisiana will evaluate your evidence and credibility.
Why that matters in Gonzales: local investigations often hinge on what can be proven—what witnesses saw, what photos show, whether a police report describes conditions accurately, and how well your medical records track the timeline.
A calculator is best treated as a planning tool, not a substitute for case review.


