AI tools usually work by taking a few inputs—age, relationship, medical bills, and a broad description of the incident—and then generating a “range.” The problem is that wrongful death recovery in Texas depends heavily on what can be proven.
In real Harlingen claims, insurance adjusters and opposing counsel focus on questions like:
- Was negligence (or another legal theory) actually supported by the record?
- Was the fatal outcome caused by the defendant’s conduct, or by an intervening factor?
- How strong are the documents and the timeline (police narrative, EMS reports, hospital records, photographs, witness statements)?
- What conflicts exist in accounts—and how will they look to a fact-finder?
A calculator can’t interview witnesses, review footage, or test whether the story is consistent with the physical evidence. That’s why estimates can be useful for planning—but dangerous if treated like a promise.


