Many wrongful death calculators use generic inputs (age, earnings, dependents) and then apply a broad “multiplier” style estimate. In practice, insurers adjust the value based on evidence and legal risk.
In and around New Kensington—where commuting routes, industrial employers, and mixed traffic can create complex collision and workplace fact patterns—claim value often turns on details like:
- How fault is likely to be allocated (including whether a driver, property owner, employer, or other party shares responsibility)
- Whether medical records support the injury-to-death timeline
- Whether evidence was preserved before key footage, maintenance logs, or witness accounts are lost
- Insurance policy limits and how many parties may be responsible
That’s why two families can enter the same calculator and receive different “range” numbers—yet end up with very different settlement outcomes.


