Most online tools that advertise a workers’ compensation payout calculator (or similar) are built to look at your answers and produce a quick range. They may ask about diagnosis, missed time, and treatment.
The problem is that Ohio settlements often turn on details the tool can’t reliably see, such as:
- The exact work restrictions your doctor provides (and whether they align with your job duties in the real world)
- Whether your medical record clearly ties your condition to the industrial accident—not just that you were treated after it
- How the insurer characterizes gaps in treatment, symptom reports, or the incident timeline
In Massillon, we also see cases where the injured worker’s day-to-day reality matters just as much as the diagnosis—think jobs that require repetitive motion, lifting, climbing, or long shifts that make “temporary” restrictions hard to follow.
AI can’t measure whether you were actually able to work within your limitations, or whether the insurer will argue that you could have returned sooner.


