AI tools typically ask for a handful of details (age, relationship, medical bills, and some basic incident information) and then produce a “range.” The problem is that wrongful death claims are highly sensitive to specifics that calculators can’t reliably see.
In Christiansburg, common gaps we see when families rely on automated estimates include:
- Who had the duty of care at the exact moment things went wrong (driver, employer, property owner, contractor, medical provider).
- How causation is proven when the death follows complications—sometimes days or weeks after the initial injury.
- What documentation truly exists (scene reports, EMS records, safety logs, maintenance history, employment records, and medical causation opinions).
- Whether liability is disputed—which can be the difference between a fast insurance response and a long fight.
A calculator may be useful as a starting point for questions, but it can’t evaluate the credibility of witnesses, the strength of records, or the defenses that often shape settlement outcomes.


