AI tools are built to create a “reasonable range” from common patterns. That can feel comforting when you’re dealing with medical bills, funeral planning, and lost household support.
However, wrongful death claims turn on details that an online calculator usually cannot see, such as:
- New Jersey evidence rules in practice (what documents exist, what reports say, and what can be authenticated)
- Causation disputes (defenses may argue the death wasn’t caused by the incident, or that other factors intervened)
- Fault allocation (in traffic cases, more than one party may be blamed, and the negotiation posture changes when fault is contested)
- Insurance dynamics (adjusters may offer early numbers to avoid a documented liability fight)
In other words: an AI output may be “math-like,” but wrongful death settlement value is proof-driven.


