AI-based calculators are often built to take inputs—injury type, treatment timeline, symptom descriptions—and then generate a rough range. For many people, that first range offers relief: it gives you a starting point instead of pure uncertainty.
In Farmington Hills, the reality is that insurers frequently focus on documentation and timelines. That means an AI output can look confident even when it’s missing key facts—like whether you were evaluated promptly, whether symptoms were consistently reported, or whether imaging and follow-up neurology aligned with your reported limitations.
Think of AI as a worksheet, not a valuation.


