AI tools are usually built to organize information you provide—like symptom timing, treatment history, and work limitations—and then generate a rough range. That can be useful when you’re overwhelmed and need a checklist.
However, AI can’t:
- confirm whether your symptoms are medically consistent with the type of brain injury you suffered
- evaluate whether your documentation would satisfy adjusters under Washington claim norms
- account for how liability is disputed in real cases (for example, whether a driver, employer, or premises owner argues the accident wasn’t the cause)
- predict how litigation risk changes negotiation leverage
Think of it as a prompting tool, not a valuation. If you use one, you should treat the output as “questions to answer,” not “money you will receive.”


