In Marina, head injuries often happen in real-world scenarios tied to how people commute, move around town, and spend time outdoors—traffic merges, busy intersections, parking-lot impacts, and pedestrian crossings near retail and transit areas. When an injury affects memory, focus, sleep, mood, or headaches, it can also change your ability to document what happened and when.
That’s where calculators are tempting: they ask for inputs (symptoms, treatment, time missed) and return a range. The issue is that California settlement value depends on proof and causation—not just the diagnosis label.
A tool may not account for:
- how clearly your symptoms were documented after the incident
- whether medical providers connected the accident to your brain-related complaints
- the strength of liability evidence (photos, witness accounts, incident reports)
- how insurers evaluate persisting cognitive symptoms over time
So think of a calculator as a way to organize questions—not a replacement for a legal review of your records.


