Most online tools work like a budgeting exercise: they ask you to select broad details (injury severity, hospitalization length, wage loss) and then generate a rough range. That can be useful if you’re trying to make sense of categories of damages.
But Glen Cove cases often turn on details that calculators can’t “see,” such as:
- How the injury happened (rear-end collision, fall on uneven pavement, impact during a night event, etc.)
- Whether early medical records clearly connect symptoms to the incident
- Whether surveillance, witness statements, or traffic/incident documentation exist
- How quickly you sought treatment and followed recommended care
A calculator should be treated as a conversation starter, not a substitute for a local attorney reviewing your medical timeline.


