Online calculators can be useful when they’re treated as a planning tool, not a verdict. Residents often start with an estimate because they want to understand whether their losses are in the realm of what other patients seek.
But in real Maryland malpractice claims, settlement value isn’t driven by a single input (like “medical bills” or “pain level”). It depends on whether evidence can support:
- A breach of the medical standard of care (what a reasonably competent provider would have done)
- Causation (that the breach actually caused the harm)
- Damages (what the harm cost, including future care needs)
A calculator can’t reliably evaluate those elements—especially causation, which is where many cases rise or fall.


