Online tools often work like this: you enter details about your injuries, lost time, and treatment, and the program generates an estimated range.
That can feel helpful—until you realize what these tools usually can’t do:
- Match your injuries to the medical proof insurers will require in South Carolina. Charges alone aren’t the same as causation.
- Account for trucking-specific liability issues. In many truck cases, the dispute isn’t just “who was driving,” but whether the trucking company, maintenance practices, or operational policies contributed.
- Handle comparative-fault arguments. Insurers may claim you were partly responsible based on how the crash happened on a roadway you know.
In Newberry, where traffic patterns can change quickly around commute hours and regional routes, small details—lane position, braking distance, sight lines, and who had the right-of-way—can heavily influence fault.


