Eastpointe claims commonly involve car crashes, intersection impacts, and slip-and-fall incidents—situations where insurers may focus on gaps in proof or argue that symptoms are “subjective.” That’s especially common with concussion and mild TBI.
A calculator can’t know:
- whether you were able to get follow-up care after the initial ER visit
- how your symptoms changed over weeks (headaches, dizziness, memory issues, sleep disruption)
- whether your work duties were adjusted due to brain-related limitations
- whether a later scan or specialist evaluation supports ongoing impairment
So instead of asking only “what’s my payout?”, the more useful question is: what evidence will an adjuster and an attorney use to connect the accident to your brain injury and your losses?


