AI-based calculators can be useful for organizing information—like whether you had emergency treatment, what types of symptoms you reported, and what medical follow-up occurred. They may also sort damages categories (medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering) into a rough framework.
However, a calculator cannot:
- verify your medical records or interpret neurological findings the way a legal team coordinates with doctors
- confirm causation (that the accident—not something else—produced your brain injury symptoms)
- account for how insurers in California evaluate credibility and documentation gaps
- replace the negotiation reality of liability disputes, comparative fault arguments, and future-care uncertainty
For Watsonville residents, that limitation matters because claims often involve injuries that can be “invisible.” A person may look fine at first—then struggle later with return-to-work demands, driving safety, childcare responsibilities, or concentration during long shifts.


