An AI-style calculator is usually designed to take inputs like:
- when symptoms started
- medical treatment history
- reported functional changes (work, driving, memory, sleep)
- types of expenses (past medical, therapy, lost wages)
That can be helpful when you’re overwhelmed—especially if brain injury symptoms make it hard to track dates and details.
But in real TBI claims, the number you see from an AI tool is not the same thing as a negotiated settlement. Insurers often look for evidence that connects the incident to the ongoing neurological effects. If the documentation is thin—or if symptoms fluctuate without explanation—adjusters may discount the claim even when the diagnosis is serious.
Think of the AI output as a checklist, not a promise.


