Most online tools work by using broad categories (severity of injury, medical costs, and sometimes pain levels) to produce a rough range. That can be helpful as a starting point, but it’s not the same as how attorneys and insurers assess a Georgia medical negligence case.
In Kennesaw, the practical difference usually comes down to evidence and procedure:
- Georgia requires proof of both breach and causation. A bad outcome alone isn’t enough.
- Medical records and documentation matter more than your recollection. If something was charted late—or not charted at all—it can change how a claim is valued.
- Georgia’s timelines and filing requirements are strict. A calculator can’t tell you whether your claim is still viable based on when the incident occurred or when the injury was discovered.
So, think of calculator ranges as “navigation,” not “destination.”


