Think of an AI calculator as a structured guess based on typical case patterns. It may ask about the crash, your injuries, treatment timing, and wage loss, then generate a range.
But in real Glendale cases, insurers often focus on details that an online form may not capture, such as:
- Whether medical notes match what you told providers right after the crash
- How quickly you were evaluated and whether follow-up care is consistent
- Whether another driver’s statements or police information supports your version of events
- What Wisconsin law requires for proving negligence and causation (not just diagnosis)
So, while an AI number can help you understand rough components, it can’t confirm liability or predict how a specific insurer will value your documented losses.


