Most online calculators use simplified inputs—such as treatment costs, injury severity, and time missed from work—to produce a rough range. That can be useful if you’re trying to understand why cases differ.
But a calculator typically cannot:
- review your actual medical records and imaging;
- analyze whether a provider’s actions fell below the standard of care;
- determine whether the negligence is the real cause of your specific harm; or
- account for disputes that are common in malpractice files, like conflicting chart notes or alternate explanations.
In Easley—and across South Carolina—insurance adjusters often focus on whether the record supports causation and whether your follow-up care was reasonable. A generic calculator can’t model those realities.


