A calculator typically uses assumptions about things like wage replacement, treatment costs, and the likelihood of long-term impairment. That can be useful if your claim follows a straightforward pattern.
In Peachtree Corners, many work injuries happen in environments where documentation is especially important—think warehouse activity, manufacturing/industrial settings, retail distribution, or busy job sites where incidents get reported quickly and then details are forgotten. If your medical records don’t match the incident narrative, or if your restrictions aren’t documented clearly, the calculator output may not reflect the way your claim is evaluated.
Also, some tools online mix workers’ comp concepts with personal injury expectations. That can create confusion—especially if you’re looking for a single “settlement check” number rather than the components that may be negotiated or resolved.
Bottom line: treat calculator results as a starting point for questions—not a prediction.


