Many AI tools produce a single range based on simplified inputs (injury severity, age, and generic future-care assumptions). In San Bruno—where many residents commute through high-traffic corridors and where traffic patterns shift during peak hours—injury facts are often more complex than the tool can model.
For example, insurers may argue about:
- How the collision happened (speed, lane changes, braking distance, visibility)
- Whether symptoms match the trauma (especially when neurological signs develop over time)
- Pre-existing conditions (common in any community, but often contested when medical histories are incomplete)
If your case turns on those disputes, a generic estimate won’t capture how the record—and California evidence standards—can change settlement value.


