AI tools usually work from patterns: they take inputs you provide (injuries, treatment, time missed from work) and generate a ballpark figure based on generalized damage categories.
In real Riverton cases, the final evaluation depends on things an online form rarely captures, such as:
- How fault is supported locally (e.g., witness clarity, video availability, and whether the crash was documented thoroughly)
- Whether medical records are consistent from the first visit through follow-up care
- The timeline of symptoms—especially for injuries that may worsen over weeks (like soft-tissue injuries, concussion symptoms, or back/neck conditions)
- How treatment aligns with what you report (insurers often scrutinize gaps)
Instead of asking, “What number will I get?” a better question is: “What facts are likely to be challenged, and what should I gather now so my claim doesn’t start behind?”


