If your loved one died in an accident—such as a collision involving commuter traffic, a pedestrian incident, a workplace injury, or a property-related event—online calculators may still point you toward a rough range. The problem is that they usually assume clean facts.
In real Forest Grove cases, valuation often turns on details like:
- How fault is likely to be allocated when more than one party contributed to the danger
- Whether medical records clearly connect the injury to the death
- What documentation exists for lost support, caregiving, and funeral costs
- Whether evidence was preserved early (photos, dashcam/video, witness statements)
When those pieces are missing—or when the defense disputes them—the settlement range can move dramatically.


