A calculator is most helpful when you use it as a planning tool, not a prediction. In Euclid, that usually means you’re trying to answer practical questions like:
- What expenses should I document first if I can’t work?
- How do I estimate medical costs when treatment is still unfolding?
- Which losses are likely to matter most if the injury affects daily tasks (and not just the first few weeks)?
A good approach is to treat the calculator like a checklist. If you can’t support an input with records (medical visits, billing, time missed from work, receipts), the estimate will be shaky.


