A calculator typically produces a rough range based on inputs like:
- medical bills and expected treatment
- wage loss and reduced earning capacity
- injury severity and persistence
- property damage
But a tool can’t review your medical records, interpret diagnostic imaging, or judge whether your crash story matches the physical evidence. In Heber, where crashes may occur on roads with changing weather and lighting conditions, the “details that matter” often include things a calculator can’t see—like what witnesses observed, what the police report actually documents, and whether the other driver’s version holds up.
Bottom line: use a calculator to understand categories and questions—not to predict a final number.


