A calculator can be useful for organizing numbers—like medical bills, prescription costs, and wage loss—into a rough estimate. In Eastpointe, however, the biggest risk is treating an estimate like a promise.
Many truck claims hinge on issues that calculators can’t “see,” such as:
- whether the crash involved comparative fault arguments (common in lane-change and intersection disputes)
- whether injuries are supported by objective medical findings
- whether trucking and cargo records line up with the timeline of the collision
A good calculator is best used as a planning worksheet—not a prediction.


