AI tools typically work by taking a few inputs (age, relationship, medical bills, incident type) and producing a broad “range.” The problem is that wrongful death outcomes in Texas hinge on proof and legal posture, not just averages.
Before you rely on any number, ask whether your situation involves issues that calculators can’t see, such as:
- Complex causation (for example, how an injury worsened over time or why certain treatment decisions mattered)
- Disputed fault (multiple drivers, shared responsibility, or unclear incident documentation)
- Evidence gaps (video not preserved, witness accounts inconsistent, or records scattered across providers)
- Insurance and coverage limits (what policies actually apply to the parties involved)
In other words, the “estimate” may reflect generic assumptions—not the specific proof your family can present.


