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The repair bill is not the whole story. Document medical, work, household, and future impact.
Car Crash Costs

A Repaired Car Does Not Mean a Repaired Life.

The visible vehicle damage may be only one part of the loss. Medical care, missed work, reduced capacity, household help, transportation, future treatment, and daily limitations can continue long after the repair estimate is paid.

Build a private impact snapshot to organize documented losses. It is not a settlement calculator, legal valuation, or promise of recovery.

Start the Crash Impact Snapshot

No charge to submit. Do not include Social Security numbers, complete medical records, or financial account numbers.

Work missed?

Submitting this form does not create an attorney-client relationship or stop a deadline.

No Instant Value Claims

The tool organizes information; it does not generate a settlement number.

Whole-Life Documentation

Medical, work, transportation, household, functional, and future impacts are reviewed together.

Private and Case Specific

The firm evaluates evidence, insurance, liability, and governing law before any legal assessment.

The Crash Impact Snapshot

Six categories of documented impact — reviewed together.

Every total is user-entered and considered incomplete until supported by records.

01

Medical care

Emergency care, diagnostic testing, specialists, therapy, medication, equipment, mileage, and anticipated follow-up.

02

Income

Missed hours, paid leave used, lost shifts, commissions, reduced schedule, lost contracts, and diminished ability to work.

03

Household

Childcare, transportation, cleaning, yard work, home maintenance, meal support, and assistance with daily activities.

04

Property & transportation

Repairs, total-loss gap, rental, rideshare, towing, storage, damaged devices, clothing, child seats, and personal property.

05

Functional impact

Sleep, mobility, lifting, driving, concentration, recreation, caregiving, intimacy, and normal activities.

06

Future impact

Recommended procedures, therapy, medication, equipment, job restrictions, scarring, impairment, and continuing assistance.

What the tool does

An organizer — never a claim value.

  • Enter optional ranges rather than exact sensitive figures.
  • Display a category-by-category documented impact snapshot — not a settlement prediction.
  • Label every total as user-entered and incomplete until supported by records.
  • Provide a printable and secure downloadable checklist without placing data in the URL or analytics.
  • Prompt you to save receipts, wage documentation, medical instructions, calendars, and photographs.
  • End with a confidential case-review option — not a score or automated acceptance decision.
Commonly overlooked

Losses that quietly compound after the repair.

  • Paid leave or vacation time used because of the collision.
  • Reduced productivity or inability to perform overtime, travel, lifting, driving, or client work.
  • Mileage, parking, tolls, transportation, and lodging for medical care.
  • Replacement services performed by family members or paid helpers.
  • Cancelled travel, events, education, training, or professional opportunities.
  • Future deductibles, copayments, therapy, medication, assistive devices, and home modifications.
  • Damage to child restraints, laptops, phones, tools, eyewear, clothing, and other personal property.
  • The time and administrative burden of medical, insurance, repair, and benefit coordination.
Why bills alone are not a case value

A claim is more than the sum of the invoices.

Value depends on facts, law, evidence, and coverage — not arithmetic.

  1. 01

    Liability may be disputed or shared.

  2. 02

    Medical charges do not automatically establish necessity, causation, prognosis, or recoverability.

  3. 03

    Insurance limits, exclusions, liens, subrogation, offsets, and collectability matter.

  4. 04

    The jurisdiction may define recoverable damages and comparative responsibility differently.

  5. 05

    Prior injuries, treatment gaps, credibility, witnesses, photographs, expert opinions, and functional proof can affect the analysis.

  6. 06

    The claimant's goals, litigation risk, time, and evidence all require individualized assessment.

Documents that help establish impact

What to preserve — starting today.

  • Medical bills, EOB statements, prescriptions, referrals, and treatment plans.
  • Pay stubs, tax records, schedules, employer verification, leave records, commission history, and business documents.
  • Receipts, mileage logs, transportation records, invoices, estimates, and replacement-service documentation.
  • A factual symptom and activity calendar created close in time to the events.
  • Photographs showing vehicle damage, visible injury, assistive devices, and reasonable changes in function.
  • Statements from people with firsthand knowledge of changes in work, mobility, household activity, and daily life.
Three-step review process

Deliberate, private, and case specific.

  1. 01

    Build the Snapshot

    Identify categories of loss and what records may support each category. Exact dollar figures are optional at the first stage.

  2. 02

    Securely Share the Summary

    Submit only the information needed for an initial conflict and claim review. Sensitive records are requested later through an approved secure method.

  3. 03

    Evaluate the Full Claim

    The firm considers liability, medical evidence, insurance, damages, defenses, deadlines, and jurisdiction before discussing legal options.

Secure detailed intake

Continue in the encrypted intake — voluntary and conditional.

A longer, conditional-logic intake covers conflict names, contact preferences, crash facts, parties, witnesses, evidence, insurance, injuries, work, income, property, household, and daily-life impact. Uploads (PDF, JPG, PNG, HEIC) use encrypted private storage, file validation, malware scanning, signed access, and retention controls. Do not upload Social Security numbers, complete medical files, account numbers, or documents you are not authorized to possess.

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Frequently asked questions

What this tool is — and is not.

Is this a settlement calculator?

No. The snapshot organizes user-entered losses. It does not estimate case value, predict a result, or replace a legal and evidentiary review.

Should I enter every medical bill?

You may begin with approximate ranges. Do not upload complete medical records or sensitive account information through an unapproved channel. The firm can request necessary records securely if the matter advances.

Can lost wages include self-employment or commission income?

Potential income loss may involve wages, commissions, contracts, business income, or diminished capacity, but proof can be complex. Preserve tax, accounting, scheduling, client, and business records and obtain case-specific advice.

What if insurance paid some of the bills?

Payment does not necessarily end the analysis. Deductibles, copayments, liens, subrogation, write-offs, reimbursement rights, and applicable law may affect what is recoverable and what must be repaid.

Can pain and loss of normal life be entered as a dollar amount?

The tool does not assign an automated dollar figure. Document symptoms, duration, treatment, restrictions, and concrete changes in daily activities for legal evaluation.

The claim should reflect the human impact — not just the repair estimate.

Organize the losses, preserve the proof, and request a case-specific review without relying on an instant-value promise.

Submission does not create an attorney-client relationship or stop any deadline. Preview the confirmation page.