Most online tools work by taking details—such as injury severity, treatment duration, and documented expenses—and turning them into a rough range. For Sierra Madre crash victims, a calculator can be useful when:
- you already have clear medical documentation (diagnoses, imaging, treatment plan),
- your work impacts are provable (pay stubs, employer letters, restrictions), and
- liability evidence is straightforward (e.g., a traffic violation captured on camera).
But calculators can mislead when the case hinges on issues that are common in real trucking claims, such as:
- disputed causation (“the symptoms weren’t caused by the crash”),
- gaps in the record (delayed care or incomplete documentation), or
- California-specific settlement dynamics that depend on how the case is built and negotiated.
In other words: a calculator may produce a number, but it can’t evaluate how insurers will challenge your proof.


