Many AI tools work like a questionnaire: you provide details about the accident, symptoms, and treatment, and the tool returns a range of potential damages.
That can help you:
- organize what information you already have (ER visit date, follow-ups, symptoms)
- recognize what documentation is missing (cognitive complaints, therapy plan, return-to-work limits)
- prepare questions for a lawyer
But here’s the problem: AI outputs don’t verify New Jersey-specific causation and proof requirements. A tool can’t review your imaging reports, evaluate whether symptom onset matches the incident, or weigh the credibility of medical and lay evidence the way an attorney and adjuster will.
So think of AI as a starting checklist, not a substitute for legal case evaluation.


