An AI-style tool typically asks for details such as your injury type, treatment timeline, and symptom history, then outputs a rough range. That can be useful when you don’t yet know what categories of damages will be involved.
But in Superior—where many incidents involve rear-end crashes, bicycle or pedestrian activity, and slip hazards in residential or retail areas—insurers often test two things first:
- Whether the accident caused the brain injury (causation and documentation)
- Whether your symptoms are consistent over time (credibility and treatment continuity)
So instead of treating AI results as “what you’ll get,” use them as a checklist: What information is missing from my story that an adjuster will demand?


