Online tools often ask for basic numbers (age, income, dependents) and then spit out a rough range. That can be useful for planning conversations, but it can also create false confidence.
In Fitchburg cases, settlement value can swing based on details like:
- whether the incident happened on a well-traveled route (commute traffic typically means clearer documentation, but also more comparative-fault arguments)
- whether weather, lighting, signage, or road maintenance played a role
- how quickly evidence was collected after the death
- what medical records show about the injury-to-death timeline
A better goal than “getting a number” is understanding what evidence categories your situation will likely require.


