Many people start with a calculator because it seems like the most direct path: enter bills, injury details, and get a number.
In practice, most online tools are built for broad assumptions. They generally can’t account for the specific evidence that decides value in a New York case—especially whether a provider’s conduct actually caused the harm you’re dealing with today.
Think of it this way: a calculator may estimate “the cost of injury,” but a settlement in Canandaigua-area cases usually turns on:
- whether the care fell below the New York standard of care (what a reasonably careful provider would do)
- whether the medical records and timeline support causation
- whether experts can explain the connection between the mistake and the injury
Without those pieces, any number you see online is best treated as a rough starting point—not a forecast.


