Online tools can seem useful because they ask for basic details—age, relationship, medical costs, and income—and then output a range. That can feel like clarity when you’re grieving.
However, in real wrongful death cases, the value hinges on issues like:
- whether a driver or other party can be shown to have breached a duty of care (and how that duty is defined under the circumstances)
- whether the fatal outcome was legally caused by the wrongful conduct
- what records exist (and what’s missing) from the earliest hours after the incident
When Vienna families rely on an AI “range” too early, they may miss the most important question: what evidence will actually hold up in negotiation—or in court if needed?


