AI tools are often built to take inputs—like symptoms, treatment history, and time missed from work—and then output a rough range. That can be helpful for organizing your questions and spotting missing records.
In real TBI cases, though, insurers and the legal system care about details that most calculators can’t reliably “guess,” such as:
- Whether your medical documentation shows a consistent timeline from the accident to symptom onset
- Whether your impairments are described in functional terms (how your daily life changed), not just as a diagnosis label
- Whether gaps in treatment can be explained in a credible way (not simply ignored)
When an AI estimate is treated like a promise, it can push people to accept early offers that don’t match the long-term impact of cognitive and neurological symptoms.


