In Calabasas, people often look up a calculator right after a crash because they want clarity. That’s normal. A calculator can be useful when:
- You have early medical documentation and want a ballpark of potential categories (medical costs, wage loss, pain and suffering).
- You’re comparing how different injuries might affect value.
- You’re preparing questions for an attorney or for your own recordkeeping.
But many online tools can’t properly account for issues that frequently matter in local motorcycle cases, such as:
- Comparative fault arguments (even a small allegation of speeding, lane-splitting, or failure to yield can change negotiations).
- Causation disputes (insurers may argue your symptoms weren’t caused by the crash or that they worsened from unrelated conditions).
- Treatment timing and documentation (especially if you had gaps in therapy or follow-ups—something adjusters look for).
- Policy limits and settlement posture (what’s realistic depends on coverage and how the insurer values risk).
A calculator can’t replace the work of building a case around evidence and medical proof.


