A calculator is typically good for one thing: turning your losses into a rough range so you can understand what evidence will matter most. For example, it may prompt you to estimate:
- medical bills (and whether treatment is still active)
- lost wages and reduced earning capacity
- property damage and out-of-pocket costs
- non-economic impacts like pain, limitations, and daily life disruptions
But it can’t reliably predict what an insurer will offer in your specific case. In Green Bay truck cases, settlement value is frequently shaped by:
- how clearly your injuries are linked to the crash (not just that you were hurt)
- whether liability becomes a shared-fault argument
- what coverage limits are available for each potentially responsible party
- the completeness of maintenance/driver records and crash documentation
In other words: use the calculator to structure your claim, not to “lock in” a number.


