Many calculators built for “anywhere in the U.S.” use broad assumptions—like the decedent’s age or a simplified multiplier approach. In real Connecticut wrongful death matters, settlement value often hinges on details that calculators can’t properly capture, such as:
- How fault is likely to be allocated when there are multiple contributing factors (driver behavior, roadway conditions, vehicle defects, crosswalk visibility, etc.)
- Whether causation is contested, particularly in complex medical or injury-to-death scenarios
- How well losses are documented, including earnings, support contributions, caregiving, and specific out-of-pocket expenses
- Practical leverage in negotiations—what the insurer thinks it will cost to defend in Connecticut
Even when families plug in the “right” inputs, the output may be misleading if the underlying evidence doesn’t match the assumptions the calculator uses.


