In the first days after a death, families are hit from multiple directions: grief, urgent bills, and questions about whether the person who died was the household’s wage earner or a caregiver.
An AI tool can seem helpful because it asks for details—age, income, medical expenses, and the relationship to survivors—then spits out a range. That can provide comfort or direction.
The problem is that wrongful death value in the real world isn’t driven by a formula. It’s driven by:
- Liability evidence (what can actually be proven)
- Causation (whether the fatal outcome is legally tied to the defendant’s conduct)
- Damages proof (what losses are documented and supported)
- North Carolina procedural requirements (including filing deadlines and claim structure)
So while an AI estimate can help you identify what information you’ll likely need, it should not be treated as a forecast of settlement value.


