A calculator is usually a rough estimator. It may try to approximate components such as wage replacement, medical-related costs, and impairment-related outcomes. The problem is that Oregon workers’ compensation decisions aren’t made from a generic formula alone.
In practice, two Eugene workers with the same diagnosed condition can see very different outcomes based on things like:
- whether treatment records clearly tie symptoms to work activity
- whether your work status changed (for example, reduced hours or modified duties)
- whether you reached medical stability and how permanency is described
- whether the insurer disputes causation or the degree of limitation
So think of a calculator as a starting point for questions—not as a prediction of what you’ll receive.


