AI-based tools typically work by taking basic inputs—injury type, treatment timing, and general categories of losses—and then applying a formula meant to resemble how insurance adjusters “ballpark” numbers.
That can be useful when you’re trying to understand whether medical bills, missed work, or ongoing pain might move the needle. But AI usually cannot see the details that make or break a Milledgeville case, such as:
- Which route you were on (common commuting corridors and regional travel patterns can affect how witnesses, cameras, and roadway conditions get documented)
- How quickly treatment began (timing can be crucial when insurers argue symptoms are unrelated)
- Whether a trucking company’s records line up with the story told in the crash report
An AI number is not the settlement. It’s a guess based on incomplete information.


