Most calculators work like a worksheet: you input injury severity, treatment costs, and lost wages, and the tool generates a rough range. In Roswell, that can be useful if you’re trying to plan ahead—like estimating how far your current medical bills may stretch or what wage loss might look like before you’ve gotten all records.
But a calculator can’t reliably account for the real drivers of value in Georgia truck cases, such as:
- How liability is split when more than one party may be responsible (driver, trucking company, maintenance contractor, cargo/shipper)
- Whether medical records support causation—i.e., that your injuries are tied to the crash
- Policy limits and whether the available coverage matches the damages
Think of the output as a starting point for questions—not a prediction.


