Most AI-style tools ask for basic information: injury severity, treatment timeline, and work impact. Based on that, they generate a rough range or a framework.
In practice, these tools are most useful for:
- Planning questions to ask your doctor (e.g., what symptoms still affect you weeks later)
- Organizing your losses into medical, wage, and non-economic categories
- Spotting missing documentation before you speak with insurers
But in Beverly Hills, “quick estimates” can be misleading when the case includes evidence complications like:
- Busy roadways and frequent lane changes that create conflicting accounts
- High pedestrian activity near nightlife, shopping areas, and hotel zones that can affect witness availability
- Video evidence that’s time-sensitive (nearby cameras, traffic systems, and business surveillance may be overwritten)
A calculator can’t see those local realities. Your lawyer can.


