AI tools are often built to take a few inputs—like age, relationship, and general expenses—and output a rough “range.” That can be emotionally tempting when you want something concrete.
But in real Sparks cases, the value of a wrongful death claim typically hinges on things an online calculator can’t reliably capture, such as:
- whether Nevada law supports the specific theory of liability based on the evidence
- how strongly the crash report and witness statements align with physical evidence
- what documentation exists for medical treatment and the timeline from injury to death
- whether the defense is likely to argue comparative fault
A calculator can be a starting point for questions—but it cannot review the documents, challenge the defense narrative, or assess whether the evidence will hold up under Nevada litigation standards.


