Many online tools assume simplified injury patterns. Real burn cases rarely behave that way—especially when the incident involves:
- Scarring that changes over time (initial healing isn’t the final outcome)
- Functional impacts (hands, joints, face, or areas that affect daily tasks)
- Secondary complications (infection risk, prolonged wound care, nerve pain)
- Multiple sources of harm (burn plus smoke exposure, stress, or trauma)
Also, California claims are heavily shaped by evidence and timing. Two people with the “same-looking” burn can end up with very different settlement values depending on how quickly treatment began, what doctors recorded, and whether future care is supported by medical recommendations.


