A calculator typically estimates a rough range based on generalized inputs (age, income, dependents). That can be helpful for learning what types of losses are often claimed.
But it usually can’t account for the factors that matter most in real Kewanee cases, such as:
- Whether a traffic crash report supports fault clearly (or leaves gaps)
- Whether eyewitness accounts match physical evidence
- How Illinois comparative fault may reduce recovery if the defense argues the decedent shared responsibility
- Whether insurance policy limits affect what can actually be paid
- Whether medical records support causation—especially when death occurs days or weeks after the initial injury
In other words, a calculator can help you ask better questions. It can’t replace a case evaluation.


