Online calculators typically ask for broad inputs (age, income, dependents) and then produce a generic range. In real Bryant claims, the value is usually shaped by factors that don’t fit neatly into a form—especially around:
- Crash reconstruction and lane/traffic evidence (what the police report shows, what witnesses saw, and what footage may exist)
- Medical causation (what records say about the injuries, complications, and timing between injury and death)
- Insurance limits and policy structure (which policies apply can change what “settlement” even means)
- Comparative fault arguments that can reduce recovery when multiple parties share blame
That’s why the most useful “calculation” is often a case-specific damages review—done with an attorney, not a guess.


