Online tools usually work like this: you enter a few facts (age, income, dependents) and the tool outputs a rough range. The problem is that wrongful death settlements in real life depend heavily on factors a calculator can’t verify.
In Flint, those missing pieces often include:
- How fault is actually assigned after an investigation (especially in multi-vehicle crashes and intersection collisions)
- What medical records show about the injury-to-death timeline
- Whether the evidence was preserved quickly (photos, witness statements, dashcam/video, maintenance logs)
- Insurance coverage limits available to pay a settlement
A calculator may give you a number to think about—but it won’t tell you whether your case is strong on liability, causation, and damages documentation.


