Online tools may ask for a few basics—like medical bills, diagnosis timing, or injury severity—and then generate an estimated range. That can be a useful starting point for planning questions.
But in Massachusetts malpractice cases, settlement value doesn’t turn on a single input. It depends on whether evidence supports:
- A deviation from the standard of care (what a reasonably competent provider would have done)
- Causation (that the deviation caused your specific harm)
- Documented damages (both past costs and future impact)
Because calculators can’t review your records, they can’t tell you whether the facts in your case are provable—or whether key gaps will let the defense argue “no causation” or “unrelated complications.”


