Online tools can be a starting point, but they often assume injuries follow a predictable pattern. In real burn cases, that’s rarely true—especially when the incident occurs in a home, a small business, or a job site where policies and training may differ.
A value estimate typically goes wrong when it doesn’t reflect:
- The burn’s functional impact (for example: limited grip after a hand burn or stiffness after a joint-area burn)
- Whether there was smoke inhalation and how long respiratory symptoms lasted
- Treatment complexity (hospital transfers, grafting, repeated wound care, scar management)
- How quickly care was obtained and documented
Instead of treating an estimate as “your number,” think of it as a prompt for what evidence your attorney will need to build a credible damages package.


