Most calculators use the same basic inputs: injury severity, medical bills, lost wages, and sometimes an estimate of future treatment. That can be useful if you’re trying to forecast what categories of damages might exist.
But in a Lindenhurst truck case, there are often complications that a generic tool can’t capture, such as:
- How New York compares fault (your recovery can be reduced if you’re found partially responsible)
- Whether the truck company and driver are both implicated (employment/training/maintenance issues)
- Whether causation is supported (injuries must be connected to the crash with medical documentation)
- The strength of the documentation available right after the crash
In other words: treat a calculator as a starting point, not a guarantee.


