A calculator can provide a starting range, but head-injury claims in Michigan don’t settle off a spreadsheet. The value of a TBI case typically depends on things like:
- How the injury is documented (ER records, imaging when available, follow-up notes)
- How symptoms affected function (work restrictions, treatment changes, provider observations)
- Whether the timeline is consistent (what you reported at the start vs. later)
- What the defense argues (causation and severity are common dispute points)
In Norton Shores, many cases involve real-world settings—busy roads during commuting hours, parking lots, construction zones, seasonal travel, and pedestrian-heavy areas—that can make the story of how the injury happened especially important. If the mechanism of injury isn’t clearly tied to the symptoms in the medical record, adjusters may push back on severity or causation.
A calculator won’t capture that nuance.


