Online tools typically ask for broad inputs (age, income, dependents) and then generate a rough range. In real Newberry cases, settlement value often turns on details that calculators don’t capture well, such as:
- How fault is argued (and whether South Carolina’s comparative responsibility concepts reduce recovery)
- Whether causation is disputed (for example, when a death follows complications or underlying conditions)
- What documentation exists locally—from incident reports to medical records and witness statements
- Insurance coverage and limits tied to the specific defendant (driver, employer, property owner, or healthcare provider)
Because of that, we treat a “calculator” as a starting point for questions—not a substitute for case-specific legal analysis.


