Think of a calculator as a damages organizer—it helps you approximate categories like:
- medical costs (past and sometimes future)
- wage loss and reduced earning capacity
- property damage
- non-economic losses (pain, suffering, and limitations)
But the part most people miss is this: settlements are not purely math problems. In Easton, insurers often scrutinize whether your injuries are supported by objective medical findings and whether the crash—rather than another cause—explains your condition.
If your documentation is incomplete, a “high estimate” from a calculator may not hold up in negotiation.


