A calculator can be useful for estimating categories—like medical expenses, wage loss, and non-economic damages—based on inputs you choose.
But a generic tool can’t:
- confirm your diagnosis or interpret neurologic findings the way an Oklahoma legal team would
- evaluate credibility issues that often matter in negotiations
- predict how insurers will treat gaps in treatment or inconsistent symptom reports
- account for Oklahoma-specific procedural realities and how claims are handled in practice
Bottom line: think of a calculator as a worksheet, not an answer key.


