In a community where people regularly commute, run errands, and share roads with cyclists and pedestrians, traumatic brain injuries frequently happen during moments that feel brief at the time—like a sudden stop in traffic or a near-miss that results in a fall or head strike.
The challenge is that brain injuries can be invisible. Headaches, dizziness, memory gaps, sleep disruption, and difficulty concentrating may not look serious during an insurance adjuster’s first review. For that reason, the “settlement worth” conversation often depends on whether you have evidence showing:
- what symptoms you had immediately after the incident,
- what clinicians diagnosed (and how they explained the connection), and
- how the injury affected daily life and work afterward.
A calculator may give a rough range, but in Forest Acres cases, attorneys and insurers usually care about how your medical record matches the timeline of the crash or incident.


