Most online tools use simplified inputs (age, income, number of dependents) and then spit out a rough range. That may help with general expectations, but it usually misses what matters most in real Monroe cases:
- Comparative fault in Washington: if the defense argues the deceased shared responsibility, settlement value can change.
- Causation disputes: in many fatal incidents, the fight is over what actually caused the death—especially when medical records are complicated.
- Insurance limits and policy structure: Monroe claims can involve multiple potential coverage sources (vehicle policies, premises coverage, employer coverage, etc.), which calculators don’t model.
- Local evidence and investigation: crash reconstruction, preservation of dashcam/video, and witness identification can make or break liability.
A better goal than “finding the number” is understanding whether your case facts support the categories of damages that matter under Washington law.


