People frequently assume the settlement hinges on whether they were diagnosed with a concussion, mild TBI, or a more serious brain injury. In practice, insurers and adjusters care less about the label and more about whether the record can support three things:
- What happened (the incident narrative)
- What injuries resulted (medical findings and symptoms)
- How long the effects lasted and what they changed (functional impact)
That matters in Tigard because head injury symptoms can be invisible—fatigue, headaches, brain fog, irritability, and concentration problems may not show up on day one. If your symptoms evolve over weeks or months, you need a record that tracks that change.
A “calculator” may produce a range, but without a clear timeline and consistent medical documentation, the range doesn’t translate into a realistic offer.


