AI tools typically generate a range based on assumptions you enter (injury severity, age, treatment, and care needs). That can be useful as a starting point—especially if you’re trying to understand why future care often drives outcomes.
In Colleyville, though, spinal cord injuries frequently come with fact patterns that are more than “diagnosis label equals settlement amount.” For example:
- Rear-end and lane-change crashes can create disputes about speed, visibility, and whether the injury symptoms match the impact.
- Parking lot incidents (uneven surfaces, poorly marked hazards, unsafe lighting) may involve multiple potential responsible parties.
- Late discovery of symptoms can lead insurers to argue the injury came from something other than the incident.
An AI calculator doesn’t have access to accident evidence, treating physician notes, or the functional testing that ties your injury to specific losses. Without that, estimates can drift—sometimes too high, sometimes too low.


