Most online tools estimate outcomes using simplified inputs—injury severity, treatment length, and generic categories of losses. That can feel helpful when you just want a rough answer.
But in trucking cases, the real dispute often isn’t whether injuries exist—it’s:
- Who is responsible (driver, employer, maintenance vendor, or other parties)
- Whether the medical record supports the claimed cause
- Whether the insurer will challenge the timing, diagnosis, or necessity of treatment
In Mauldin, where many people rely on daily commutes and work schedules, insurers may also scrutinize wage-loss claims. A calculator can’t verify pay stubs, job restrictions, or how treatment actually affected your ability to work.
Bottom line: treat an AI estimate like a worksheet—not a verdict.


