Online tools usually ask for general details: the decedent’s age, dependents, income, and the type of loss. That can be a starting point—especially for understanding what categories of damages might be discussed.
However, calculators can mislead Albany families when they don’t account for things that often change the outcome in real cases, such as:
- Proof quality (dashcam/surveillance availability, witness consistency, and whether evidence is preserved)
- Comparative fault issues (Georgia’s fault allocation can reduce recovery even when someone else was at fault)
- Causation disputes (for example, whether an underlying medical condition or later complications contributed to death)
- Insurance limits and coverage structure (which can cap what insurers will negotiate)
The takeaway: use a calculator only to frame questions—not to predict what your family will receive.


