Online tools usually ask for basic inputs (age, income, dependents) and then apply broad multipliers. That can be useful for rough planning, but it misses the evidence that typically drives settlement value in real cases.
For example, many Monrovia wrongful death claims turn on proof such as:
- Crash mechanics (what happened at the intersection, lane changes, traffic control, impact details)
- Medical causation (how the injury led to death, what complications occurred, and when)
- Comparative fault (whether the defense argues the decedent contributed to the incident)
- Insurance limits and policy details that affect what settlement authority exists
A lawyer translates those facts into the categories of damages California recognizes—something a generic calculator can’t do.


