AI-based tools typically ask for inputs like injury severity, treatment duration, and lost income. They then generate a rough range designed to help you understand what claims might involve.
In real Farmington Hills cases, however, the biggest gaps often come from things a calculator can’t reliably verify:
- Whether the truck driver’s conduct is supported by documentation (not just the crash report)
- Whether a trucking company’s paperwork holds up under scrutiny—logs, maintenance history, and safety records
- How Michigan medical documentation is interpreted when causation is disputed
- Whether comparative fault is likely to be argued (for example, lane position or sudden stops during commute traffic)
AI can’t pull the maintenance logs or explain how a judge or jury might weigh conflicting accounts. That’s where legal review becomes essential.


