AI tools can be helpful for understanding categories of damages, but they usually can’t account for what makes trucking cases in the DFW area unique—especially when a crash happens during peak commute hours, near interchanges, or in traffic patterns where braking distances and lane positioning matter.
In practice, insurers evaluate claims based on:
- Whether the truck driver and trucking company can be held responsible under Texas negligence rules
- Whether evidence supports causation (that your injuries were caused by the crash)
- How your treatment timeline looks after the collision
- Whether comparative fault is raised (even partially)
That means two people can enter the same inputs into an online tool and get different outcomes once an adjuster reviews crash reports, maintenance history, log data, and medical records.


