Many “AI wrongful death settlement calculators” are built for generic inputs. They may ask for age, income, and incident type, then spit out a number-like range. The problem is that Shiloh wrongful death claims frequently turn on details an online form can’t capture—especially when the death follows a traffic crash.
For example, in fatal collision cases common to the area, the value of a claim may hinge on:
- How fault is allocated when more than one driver or roadway condition is involved
- Whether the police report aligns with witness accounts and vehicle data
- Causation—whether the fatal outcome resulted from the crash or later complications
- Insurance coverage and policy limits, including how insurers frame liability early
An AI estimate can’t review the crash scene documentation, medical timeline, or the evidence insurers will rely on. It also can’t evaluate how Illinois courts and juries typically respond when fault is contested.


