Many calculators ask for broad inputs—age, income, “dependents,” and a rough life-expectancy estimate. But in Akron, value hinges on proof that usually isn’t captured by a few drop-down boxes, such as:
- Crash reconstruction or traffic evidence (skid marks, signal timing, dashcam/video, lane position)
- Ohio comparative fault issues (how a jury might assign responsibility when multiple parties are involved)
- Medical causation (whether the death resulted from the injury/incident as opposed to a preexisting condition)
- Insurance coverage realities (including policy limits and whether multiple sources may apply)
Because of that, the most accurate “calculation” is an evidence-based evaluation—not a formula.


