Many AI tools work by taking a few inputs (age, relationship, medical bills, and general loss categories) and producing a broad range. That can feel reassuring, but wrongful death outcomes in Texas turn heavily on fact-specific issues—especially:
- Causation disputes (what actually caused the death, and whether intervening factors are blamed)
- Comparative responsibility arguments (where defendants try to reduce liability by pointing to the decedent’s actions)
- Insurance and coverage posture (what policies exist, what exclusions apply, and whether multiple parties are involved)
- Documentation gaps (missing records, incomplete incident reports, or unclear timelines)
In North Texas, it’s common for families to discover after the fact that key evidence is harder to obtain than they expected—dash camera footage may be overwritten, witnesses may be difficult to locate, and medical records can take time to gather. A calculator won’t flag those risks.


