Online calculators often use generalized inputs—age, income, and a few damage categories—to produce a rough range. But in real Burleson cases, the value turns on details that a generic tool can’t see, such as:
- How the fatal incident happened (and whether the evidence supports your theory)
- Whether multiple parties share responsibility (common in traffic and construction-related events)
- The strength of medical proof linking the incident to the death
- Insurance limits on the at-fault party’s coverage
For many Texas families, the biggest frustration isn’t that calculators are “wrong”—it’s that they don’t account for how liability and causation are actually argued in a claim.


