Most calculators you find online are built for “average” situations. In real La Plata cases, value can swing dramatically based on details that calculators usually can’t see, such as:
- Where the incident happened (high-speed corridors vs. quieter residential streets vs. commercial properties)
- How witnesses describe the moment (and whether their accounts match physical evidence)
- Medical documentation quality showing the injury-to-death timeline
- Maryland comparative negligence questions—if the defense argues the deceased or another party contributed to the harm
- Insurance limits tied to the specific employer/vehicle/property involved
A calculator can’t review the police report, evaluate causation with medical records, or translate your losses into the categories Maryland law recognizes. That’s why two families can enter the same search term and leave with very different outcomes.


