Most online tools produce a rough figure based on generic assumptions (burn size, “severity category,” and average medical costs). In real burn cases, the valuation depends less on the label and more on what your treatment actually shows.
In Marietta, that often means insurers scrutinize:
- Whether treatment matched the burn’s progression (burns can worsen over days)
- Whether there were complications (infection risk, scarring that affects function, or inhalation concerns)
- Whether work disruption is documented (especially for employees in trades and shift-based roles)
- Whether the incident report supports your timeline
If a calculator doesn’t account for these specifics, it may understate (or sometimes overstate) potential settlement value.


