In real claims, insurers don’t pay a number pulled from a website. They assess:
- What happened (fault evidence and the crash narrative)
- What you were hurt by (medical diagnoses tied to the crash)
- How the injury affected your life (work, daily activities, treatment course)
- How long it will last (recovery timeline and any likely ongoing limitations)
- What the other side will argue (shared fault, gaps in treatment, causation disputes)
A calculator can be useful for thinking about categories of losses, but in Greenville cases the final result typically hinges on whether your documentation matches the story of the crash and the progression of symptoms.


