Most calculators work like a planning tool: you enter details about your injuries, treatment, wage loss, and property damage. Then the tool estimates potential ranges.
In Cedartown truck crash cases, calculators often run into the same problem: they can’t reliably account for the evidence needed to prove (1) who caused the crash and (2) what injuries the crash actually caused. Without that proof, insurers may reduce or deny damages—even when a person feels clearly injured.
So treat calculator results as a starting point, not an expectation. The real work is building documentation that makes the math believable.


