Most wrongful death settlement calculators ask for basic inputs (age, income, dependents) and then generate a generic range. That approach breaks down when the real dispute is about Texas fault and proof—for example:
- Comparative responsibility: In Texas, you can still recover even if you share some responsibility, but the award is reduced based on fault. Online tools can’t accurately predict how a jury or insurer will allocate responsibility.
- Causation: Was the death caused by the incident, or did pre-existing conditions contribute? Canyon cases often turn on medical timelines and expert review.
- Evidence quality: Settlement value heavily depends on whether investigators can document what happened—especially in cases involving road conditions, visibility, or unclear witness accounts.
A calculator may point you toward categories of damages, but it can’t translate your specific evidence into a realistic settlement evaluation.


