Many online tools assume a simplified path: burn size, burn depth, and a quick return to normal. Real burn cases are different—especially when injuries affect hands, face, joints, or breathing.
In Greer, we often see burn claims where:
- The incident happens in a fast-moving work environment (production floors, maintenance areas, loading docks), and early documentation is inconsistent.
- Treatment spans multiple stages (initial emergency care, follow-ups at burn centers or specialists, scar management, therapy).
- Liability gets blurred by competing explanations—equipment misuse, maintenance history, inadequate training, or unsafe storage.
That’s why “settlement calculator” numbers can be misleading. The stronger question is: What proof and medical timeline do insurers have to evaluate the harm?


