Most calculators work like this: you enter an age, income, and relationship, and the tool generates a rough range. The problem is that real settlement value in Columbus depends on details that aren’t captured by a form.
For example, in Ohio cases involving:
- Fatal crashes on commuting corridors (where fault may be disputed)
- Intersections and turning lanes (where multiple parties may be involved)
- Construction zones or maintenance issues (where documentation matters)
- Pedestrian and cyclist incidents (where comparative fault can change outcomes)
—the “inputs” that matter most are often evidence-based: what the police report shows, what witnesses say, how the scene is documented, and whether medical records support causation.
A calculator can’t reliably measure those factors. A lawyer’s job is to identify what can be proven and what can’t.


