A calculator is most useful as a planning tool. It can prompt you to list losses such as:
- medical expenses and ongoing treatment
- missed wages and reduced earning capacity
- medication, therapy, transportation, and caregiving needs
- vehicle or property damage
- non-economic impacts like pain, limitations, and disruption to daily life
However, a calculator can’t reliably estimate how insurers will treat your case when they argue issues like:
- injury causation (whether symptoms match the crash)
- comparative fault (whether you contributed)
- coverage limits for the trucking company or related parties
In Greenfield, where crashes can involve commuting corridors, construction zones, and sudden traffic changes, the story behind the impact matters as much as your medical totals.


