A settlement calculator typically works by asking you for inputs (injury type, time out of work, treatment costs, and similar factors) and then producing an estimated range.
That can be helpful when you’re still gathering information. It can also help you understand why two people with “similar injuries” may end up with very different outcomes.
However, calculators generally can’t account for details that change results in real Tooele cases, such as:
- Comparative fault arguments insurers raise after roadside or intersection disputes
- Whether medical documentation clearly connects symptoms to the crash (this is often where claims are challenged)
- Treatment delays caused by scheduling access, wait times, or missed follow-ups
- How Utah insurance adjusters interpret policy limits and the strength of liability evidence
In other words, a calculator can help you ask better questions—but it shouldn’t be treated like a promise.


