Many online tools work by asking for basic facts—age, relationship, incident type, and some financial details—and then generating a rough range. That can feel useful when you’re trying to plan around lost income, medical bills, and funeral costs.
But in Corinth, the most common reason an AI estimate falls short is that it can’t account for what often decides these cases:
- Local fault disputes (for example, conflicting witness accounts after a crash in traffic)
- Causation issues (when the defense argues the death wasn’t caused by the original injury)
- Missing documentation (police reports, medical records, employment records, or incident logs)
- Insurance strategy (adjusters may push early resolution while key facts are still being gathered)
An AI tool may give you a starting point, but it usually can’t tell you what’s missing—or what the other side will argue next.


