Online tools often ask for basic details—age, income, dependents—and generate a rough number. That can be useful for starting conversations with family and preparing questions for counsel.
But a calculator cannot reliably account for the things that most strongly move a case in real life, such as:
- How fault is likely to be allocated under Ohio’s comparative fault rules
- Whether the medical records support the injury-to-death link
- The strength of evidence (dashcam/video, witness statements, maintenance logs)
- Insurance coverage limits and policy details
In other words: think of a calculator as a question-starter, not a promise.


