LexSteward
Personal Injury

What is your injury case really worth?

Two numbers decide a personal-injury outcome: what the case is worth, and what actually reaches you after fees and liens. These tools make both transparent — and flag the deadline that can end a claim before it starts.

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Who it’s for

Anyone hurt by someone else’s negligence, weighing whether to pursue a claim.

Why it works

A transparent value and net-recovery estimate is the single most compelling reason an injury victim picks up the phone.

The personal injury toolkit

5 calculators, one practice area.

Each runs in the visitor’s browser, shows a real answer instantly, then routes a lead to the firm. No sign-up, nothing stored.

Injury Case-Value Estimator

Personal Injury

A multiplier-based illustration of case value: economic damages plus a pain-and-suffering factor scaled to severity.

What you enter
Medical bills, lost wages, and injury severity.
What you get
An illustrative value range — not a prediction.

Settlement Net-Recovery Calculator

Personal Injury

Shows the money that actually reaches the client after the attorney fee, medical liens, and case costs.

What you enter
Gross settlement, fee percentage, liens, and costs.
What you get
An estimated net recovery, line by line.

Pain-&-Suffering Multiplier Explainer

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Pain-&-Suffering Multiplier Explainer

What you enter
What you get

Personal-Injury Statute-of-Limitations Lookup

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A rough countdown to the filing deadline (statute of limitations) for an injury claim.

What you enter
Your state’s filing limit and time since the injury.
What you get
An estimated filing window — confirm with a lawyer immediately.

Comparative-Fault Recovery Reducer

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Comparative-Fault Recovery Reducer

What you enter
What you get
Try it now — live

See the numbers for yourself.

This is the real tool your visitors would use, recolored to your firm.

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Estimated case value (illustrative)
$99,200 – $148,800
A multiplier-based estimate — actual value depends on liability, insurance limits, and the facts. Not a prediction.
Economic damages (bills + wages)$40,000
Pain & suffering (×3, est.)$84,000
Estimated range$99,200 – $148,800
This is an illustrative estimate for general informational purposes only. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice, it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and it is not a quote, promise, prediction, or guarantee of any benefit, amount, eligibility, deadline, or outcome. Figures are based on published government sources as of the date shown and change over time; results may not reflect current law or the facts of your situation. Do not rely on this tool — consult a licensed attorney before taking or refraining from any action.
How it works

From curious to qualified, in three steps.

01

Enter the basics

Medical bills, lost wages, severity — or a settlement figure.

02

See the numbers

An illustrative value, your net after fees, and your deadline.

03

Move fast

Injury deadlines are unforgiving — send it in.

The key numbers

The verified figures behind the math.

Every calculator draws on published government sources, dated and monitored. These are the current ones for personal injury.

3
NY personal-injury SOL
As of 2026 · NY CPLR §214(5) — three years for personal injury
NY: 3 · CA: 2 · TX: 2 · FL: 2
Starter per-state SOL table (years) — VERIFY EACH STATUTE
As of 2026 · State limitations statutes (CA CCP §335.1; TX CPRC §16.003; FL §95.11(4)(a) [reduced to 2 yrs eff. 2023]; etc.)
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NY rule — pure comparative negligence
As of 2026 · NY CPLR §1411 — pure comparative negligence (recovery reduced by your %, never barred)
The rules where you live

Injury law varies by state.

Filing deadlines and fault rules differ everywhere. Verified figures appear instantly; anything we haven’t confirmed for your state says so, rather than guessing.

Personal-injury filing deadline3 years
Comparative-fault rulePure comparative negligence
2026 minimum wage$17.00/hr
Workers’-comp max weekly$1,222.42/wk
Common questions

Personal Injury — answered.

How is the value of an injury claim determined?

Claim value reflects factors like medical treatment, lost income, and the impact of the injury on your life, weighed against the available insurance and the facts. Every case is different, so figures come from the specifics rather than a fixed formula.

How long do I have to file a personal injury claim?

Each state sets a statute of limitations that limits how long you have to bring a claim, and missing it can bar your case entirely. Because the clock starts early, it’s wise to check your state’s deadline promptly.

What if I was partly at fault?

Many states still allow recovery when you’re partly at fault, though your compensation may be reduced by your share of responsibility. How that works depends on your state’s comparative or contributory fault rules.

Should I accept the insurance company’s first offer?

Early offers may not fully account for ongoing treatment or long-term effects, so it’s worth understanding your claim before accepting. Once you settle, you generally can’t reopen the claim.

Do I have to go to court?

Many personal injury claims resolve through settlement without a trial, though preparing as if a case could go to court often strengthens your position. Whether to settle or proceed is ultimately your decision with counsel.

Why it’s built this way

Numbers you can stand behind.

Official sources only

Every figure traces to a federal or state primary source — VA, SSA, IRS, USCIS, the U.S. Trustee — with its effective date shown.

Attorney-reviewed

Tools are reviewed by a licensed attorney and ship as illustrative information, never as advice or a guarantee.

Always current

Monitored on each source’s own cadence — annual COLA, quarterly IRS interest, and so on — so a stale number can’t linger.

Zero retention

The math runs in the visitor’s browser. No claimant data is stored unless they choose to send it to the firm.

Put the personal injury toolkit on your firm’s site.

One line of code, or let us build the whole site. It runs itself — no agency, no retainers.

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Rules vary by jurisdiction and change; this reflects your state as of 2026 and may be wrong or out of date — confirm with a licensed attorney. This is an illustrative estimate for general informational purposes only. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice, it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and it is not a quote, promise, prediction, or guarantee of any benefit, amount, eligibility, deadline, or outcome. Figures are based on published government sources as of the date shown and change over time; results may not reflect current law or the facts of your situation. Do not rely on this tool — consult a licensed attorney before taking or refraining from any action.