Online calculators typically estimate value using broad assumptions—like whether someone went to the ER, how long treatment lasted, or whether there were lost wages. But TBI cases are different because the impact can be invisible and change over time, especially when symptoms show up days later or fluctuate with stress and sleep.
In Brooklyn Center, common case patterns can also skew online estimates:
- Low-speed collision claims where symptoms appear later (dizziness, headaches, attention problems) and the initial records don’t fully capture the severity.
- Intersection and commuting crashes where paperwork is created quickly, but medical documentation takes follow-up visits to “connect the dots.”
- Pedestrian and cyclist impacts where mechanism evidence (impact location, witness observations) becomes central.
A calculator may help you frame questions—but it cannot replace a case evaluation based on medical proof, functional limits, and Minnesota-specific claim rules.


