What the estimate looks at
The review uses the same broad questions most people ask after a crash: who was at fault, whether anyone was hurt, whether medical care is underway, whether work has been affected, and whether a commercial vehicle was involved.
What the estimate cannot know yet
No short form can tell you everything. It cannot know the full medical timeline, the quality of the evidence, the available insurance, or how a specific state rule may affect a claim.
What happens after the score
You see the result first. If that is enough, you can stop there. If you want follow-up, you can request it after the estimate instead of being forced into that step up front.
What information should I have before I start?
The review is easier if you already know the date of the crash, whether treatment started, whether work was affected, and whether a commercial vehicle was involved. You do not need every record in front of you.
Is the estimate the same as a settlement offer?
No. It is a directional score based on the facts you enter. It is not a quote, a guarantee, or a promise about what a claim will pay.
Does this site give legal advice?
No. It is a claim-review and attorney-advertising site. It is meant to help you sort out your next step, not replace legal advice.
What if I am not sure who was at fault yet?
You can still use the review. Just keep in mind that uncertainty about fault is one of the main things that can make a claim harder to evaluate.
Ready to check the claim?
Start with the estimate. Request a consultation only if you want follow-up after seeing the result.