Most online calculators work by asking for a few broad facts (age, relationship, and some financial inputs) and then producing a “range.” That can be helpful as a starting point—but it frequently overlooks what decides value in Washington claims:
- Where the incident happened and how Washington investigators interpret it. In traffic cases, location details (intersection conditions, roadway visibility, signal timing, speed, and lane control) can determine how fault is allocated.
- Whether witnesses and records are still available. In the days after a fatal incident, evidence can become harder to obtain as time passes—dashcam retention, scene photos, witness contact information, and early medical documentation.
- How insurance teams frame liability. Adjusters often focus on gaps: unclear causation, missing documentation, or disputes about whether the defendant’s conduct was a substantial factor.
In short: AI can’t evaluate whether the evidence in your Tumwater case is strong enough to support liability and damages the way a lawyer can.


