Online tools often take a few inputs—like medical bills, injury type, or time off work—and spit out a rough range. That can help you sanity-check whether your losses are in the ballpark.
But a calculator cannot reliably account for issues that drive outcomes in real malpractice cases, such as:
- whether a provider’s conduct fell below the New York standard of care
- whether medical records show a clear causation link between the error and your specific harm
- how insurers treat pre-existing conditions or complications that may have had alternative explanations
- whether your claim is limited by New York’s statute of limitations (deadlines can be unforgiving)
So think of a calculator as a starting point for questions—not a promise of what you’ll receive.


