Many work injuries here involve physically demanding roles—construction trades, warehouse or yard work, equipment-heavy environments, and jobs where a “light duty” option may not be realistic. When that’s the case, a generic estimate can miss the biggest drivers of value.
Common local friction points include:
- Commute and schedule realities: even if a provider offers restrictions, the insurer may argue you could return if “alternate duties” exist—ignoring what your worksite and commute actually require.
- Documentation gaps from rushed treatment: people sometimes assume the case will settle quickly, so they don’t press for clear functional limitations in the medical notes.
- Disputes over what work caused the problem: in a region where many workers handle repetitive tasks and changing weather/terrain, insurers may question whether the work event truly triggered the injury.
An AI tool can’t weigh those factors the way a Washington-focused attorney can.


