In a lot of head injury claims, the biggest fight isn’t whether you feel different—it’s whether insurance can be convinced that the crash, fall, or impact caused the brain injury and how it affected you afterward.
In Coconut Creek, that proof often relies on details that show up in everyday scenarios:
- Traffic and commuting impacts: Rear-end collisions and sudden braking can create whiplash and head impacts that lead to concussion symptoms.
- Pedestrian and crosswalk moments: Confusion, dizziness, and disorientation are common after a head strike, but they must be documented early.
- Parking-lot and driveway incidents: Slips, trips, and uneven surfaces can look minor at first—until headaches, sleep disruption, or memory problems appear.
- After-event delays: It’s not unusual for people to “push through” for a few days. In TBI claims, that delay can become a negotiation issue unless medical notes explain the timeline.
A calculator can’t know whether your records clearly connect the incident to your symptoms. That connection is where settlements are won—or reduced.


