Are AI Settlement Calculators Accurate in Michigan?

Knowledge Base · AI & the Law

Are AI Settlement Calculators Accurate in Michigan?

By Attorney Manny Chahal · Updated June 2026 · Reading time: ~8 min

After a crash, it is natural to type “how much is my injury claim worth” into your phone and land on a free AI settlement calculator. You plug in a few numbers, and a confident dollar figure pops out. Please do not take that number to heart, in either direction. Those tools cannot see your medical records, they do not know Michigan law, and the figure they show is often far below what a real claim is worth. Here is the good news: your case has a real value, and it is set by Michigan statutes and your actual losses, not by an app. This guide explains how these calculators work, why their numbers mislead injured people, and how your claim is truly measured in Michigan.

What an AI Settlement Calculator Actually Does

Most of these tools run a simple formula. They take your medical bills, sometimes add lost wages, then multiply by a number meant to stand in for pain and suffering. That “multiplier” is usually a guess between one and five. Some newer tools wrap that same math in AI language and promise a smarter estimate, but underneath it is still a rough average pulled from unrelated cases.

The problem is what they leave out. A calculator does not read your MRI. It does not know that your shoulder will never fully heal, that you cannot lift your child, or that you had to leave a job you loved. It has no idea whether the at-fault driver had real insurance or whether a second policy might also pay. It treats a life-changing injury and a minor strain as if they sit on the same chart. Real claim value lives in those details, and a one-size formula erases them.

Why the Number Is Almost Always Wrong for Michigan

Michigan is a no-fault state with its own rules, and a generic national calculator almost never accounts for them. Your medical care after a car crash is generally handled through Personal Injury Protection benefits, a separate track from the pain-and-suffering claim most calculators try to estimate. Mixing the two, which these tools routinely do, produces a number that means very little.

Since July 2020, Michigan PIP is no longer one level for everyone. Drivers now pick a coverage tier that runs from unlimited down to a full opt-out, and if your medical bills pass your chosen cap you may also have a separate claim against the at-fault driver for the excess. An app has no idea which tier your policy carries or whether that extra claim exists, so it can miss a whole avenue of recovery.

There is also a threshold question a calculator simply cannot answer. In Michigan you can pursue money for pain and suffering against an at-fault driver only if your injury crosses a legal bar called a serious impairment of body function. Whether your injury qualifies turns on how the harm affects your actual life, a judgment no app can make from a few dropdown menus. Get that wrong and the calculator’s figure is not just off, it is built on a foundation that may not apply to you at all.

What this means for your case: Pain-and-suffering claims in Michigan are governed by MCL 500.3135, which permits noneconomic damages only when an injury is a death, permanent serious disfigurement, or a serious impairment of body function. The Michigan Supreme Court explained how to apply that threshold in McCormick v Carrier, 487 Mich 180 (2010), and since the 2019 no-fault reform that test is codified at MCL 500.3135(5), which requires that the impairment be objectively manifested, affect an important body function, and affect your general ability to lead your normal life, with no requirement that it be permanent. Your medical and wage benefits flow separately through no-fault PIP under MCL 500.3107(1)(a). If you share fault, MCL 600.2959 reduces your damages by your share of fault, and once you are more than 50 percent at fault it bars pain-and-suffering money, though your economic losses like medical bills and wage loss can still be reduced rather than erased. Watch two different clocks as well: a PIP benefits claim generally must be brought within one year under MCL 500.3145, while a pain-and-suffering lawsuit against the at-fault driver has three years under MCL 600.5805. None of these moving parts fit inside a multiplier.

The Insurer Has a Calculator Too, and It Is Built to Pay Less

Here is something worth knowing before you trust any automated number. Insurance companies run injury claims through their own software, with names like Colossus, and that software is tuned to suggest low payouts. So when a free online calculator and an insurer’s program both spit out a modest figure, that is not two independent confirmations. It is the same lowball logic dressed up twice. We explain how the insurer’s side of this works in our guide to how Colossus software lowballs injury settlements.

The deadlines matter too, and no calculator will warn you about them. Michigan limits how far back your no-fault benefits can reach, and missing that window can quietly shrink what you collect no matter what any tool predicted.

What the calculator usesWhat it ignoresWhat actually sets your value
Total medical billsWhether care is covered by PIP or counts toward pain and sufferingHow MCL 500.3135 and your real injuries apply to your life
A guessed pain multiplierPermanent limits, future care, and lost enjoyment of lifeMedical proof and the McCormick standard, not an average
One driver’s insuranceExtra policies, PIP priority, and uninsured or underinsured (UM/UIM) coverage on your own policy that may payA full search for every source of recovery
Today’s snapshotThe one-year-back rule and other deadlinesTimely, well-documented claims under MCL 500.3145

The Bottom Line on AI Settlement Calculators

Use them for curiosity if you like, but do not let a phone app tell you what your recovery, your future, and your health are worth. The figure is built from strangers’ cases and ignores the Michigan rules that decide your claim. A low number can scare you into settling for far too little, and a high number can set you up for disappointment. The honest answer to “what is my case worth” comes from reading your records, applying Michigan law, and finding every policy that can pay. That is a free conversation with a lawyer, not a calculation from a website. You can also compare our plain-English breakdown of what serious injury claims are really worth in Michigan.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does the AI calculator give such a low number?

Because it uses a simple formula built from averages and leaves out the things that raise value, like permanent limits, future medical needs, and extra insurance policies. It also cannot tell whether your injury crosses Michigan’s legal threshold for pain-and-suffering damages, so its figure often rests on the wrong assumptions.

Can I just use the number to negotiate with the adjuster myself?

It is risky. The insurer already runs your claim through software designed to pay less, so quoting a low online estimate can anchor you below fair value. Real leverage comes from documented injuries and knowing which Michigan laws apply, not from an app’s guess.

Does the calculator know about Michigan no-fault rules?

Almost never. Most are national tools that blend medical benefits and pain-and-suffering claims together, which Michigan keeps on separate tracks. They also ignore deadlines like the one-year-back rule that can affect what you actually collect.

How is my Michigan injury claim really valued?

By looking at your actual medical records, your wage loss, the permanence of your injuries, how the harm affects your daily life under the McCormick standard, your share of fault, and every insurance policy that might pay. That requires reading the file, not filling in a form.

Is it worth talking to a lawyer if my injury seems minor?

Yes, and the call is free. Injuries that look minor at first can turn out to be serious, and an early conversation protects your deadlines and your options. You lose nothing by getting a real read on your case before you rely on any automated number.

Want a real number instead of an app’s guess? Let us review your case free.

Attorney Manny Chahal personally reviews every case and finds every policy that can pay. Free statewide consultation, day or night. No fee unless we recover.

Call 1-844-624-2425