Most online tools work like this: you enter broad facts (age, relationship, income), and the tool generates a rough range based on averages.
In real Englewood cases, the numbers can move dramatically because:
- Fault may be shared. New Jersey uses a comparative framework, so even when a defendant is largely responsible, the defense may argue the decedent or another party contributed.
- Causation is often disputed. With medical issues, the defense may claim the death was due to an underlying condition rather than the incident.
- Insurance limits shape settlement posture. Even strong liability evidence can meet negotiation pressure if coverage is limited.
A calculator can be a starting point for understanding categories of loss—but your case value depends on proof, not estimates.


