Most AI tools generate a rough value range by using inputs like injury severity and medical treatment. That can help you sanity-check whether you’re thinking in the right categories.
But in real truck cases in Ashwaubenon and the Green Bay area, insurers often don’t negotiate based on an algorithm. They evaluate:
- Which party is legally responsible (driver, trucking company, maintenance, cargo/shipper interests)
- Whether your medical records support causation—that the crash, not something else, caused your symptoms
- How quickly treatment began and whether it aligns with what the crash would realistically cause
- Whether fault is shared (Wisconsin law allows fault to be compared when more than one party contributed)
A calculator can’t decide how your facts will be interpreted under Wisconsin’s comparative-fault framework or how your documentation will hold up.


