Most online tools produce a number based on basic inputs (injury severity, medical costs, wage loss). That’s useful for planning, but truck cases are rarely that straightforward.
In South Florida, adjusters may scrutinize:
- whether treatment started promptly after the crash
- whether injuries documented later are consistent with what was first reported
- whether other traffic factors contributed to the crash (including lane changes, turning movements, and visibility)
- the timing and completeness of evidence from the scene
A calculator doesn’t know what law enforcement recorded, what photos captured at the scene, or what trucking records reveal about the crash.


