Many online tools generate a number by applying broad averages to the details you type in. In real wrongful death cases, the value typically hinges on issues that don’t fit neatly into a calculator:
- Ohio fault disputes: Even when the other side admits something happened, they may argue causation, comparative negligence, or that the death wasn’t caused by the incident.
- Insurance posture: Adjusters may offer a quick figure early to see whether the family will accept before key records are gathered.
- Local documentation differences: In many Ohio fatal-incident matters, the quality and timing of reports (police, EMS, hospital, towing/vehicle records) strongly affects what can be proven.
- Proof of losses: Funeral expenses and medical bills are often documentable. But future losses, wage capacity, and non-economic harm require case-specific support.
A calculator can be a starting conversation-starter, but it can’t evaluate what Ohio courts and juries typically respond to—especially when responsibility is contested.


