AI-style tools are often built to organize inputs—like injury type, symptom timeline, treatment history, and work disruption—then output a rough range. In Aurora, that can be useful because many residents are balancing treatment appointments, missed shifts, school responsibilities, and commuting delays.
But here’s the key limitation: most AI calculators can’t verify whether your symptoms are medically documented, whether they’re tied to the incident, or whether Colorado adjusters will view your record as consistent.
Instead of treating a result like a settlement figure, use it to build a checklist. For example:
- Do your medical records reflect the cognitive or neurological symptoms you’re reporting?
- Is there a clear timeline from the crash/fall to the first documented symptoms?
- Do you have documentation of functional impact—like returning to work with restrictions, reduced hours, or ongoing therapy needs?
That’s where a local attorney can help you turn “data” into a claim that can be evaluated fairly.


