A calculator can be a useful starting point—think of it as a way to organize potential loss categories. But it’s not designed to account for the most important variables that decide value in real truck cases.
In Boulder City, those variables often include:
- How quickly you were evaluated after the crash (injury symptoms don’t always show up immediately)
- Whether the crash involved a tourist/commuter corridor where traffic conditions and visibility matter
- Whether multiple parties are involved (driver + trucking company + potentially others tied to loading, maintenance, or equipment)
- How consistent your treatment records are with the timeline of the collision
If your estimate doesn’t reflect those realities, it may point you in the wrong direction—either by overstating what’s provable or understating what the evidence supports.


