Important limits
AI injury estimate · Florida matters · No obligation
Hurt in Florida?
Describe it once. See an estimate.
Tell us what happened in your own words. AI organizes the facts, our estimate rules calculate a cautious range, and nothing is shared with the sponsor firm's attorney unless you say so.
Important limits
A few things worth knowing up front.
AI case estimate
Tell us what happened.
A short paragraph is enough to start. Include where it happened, what caused it, what hurts, and any treatment you received.
- Where and when it happened
- What caused the injury
- Whether you received medical care
- Police report, photos, video, or witnesses
Step 2 of 3 · Guided chat
Tell me what happened.
Just answer each question in your own words. I'll fill in the legal details as we go.
Step 2 of 3 · Manual form
Case basics
Florida injury estimate guide
What affects a personal injury estimate?
A Florida injury estimate can change as treatment, records, fault facts, and insurance coverage become clearer. The prompt above gives you a fast starting range before you decide whether to share anything with the sponsor firm's attorney.
Start with the estimate promptWho caused the incident, whether facts are disputed, and what proof points to fault.
Diagnoses, pain level, emergency care, specialists, surgery, or long-term impairment.
Police reports, incident reports, photos, video, witnesses, medical records, and bills.
Insurance limits, PIP, uninsured motorist coverage, commercial policies, or property-owner coverage.
Is this AI injury estimate legal advice?
No. AI helps organize the facts you type, and estimate rules calculate a cautious range. It is not a lawyer, does not create an attorney-client relationship, and does not guarantee an outcome.
Do I have to share my contact information to see an estimate?
No. You can see the estimate first. Contact information and authorization are requested only if you choose to share your case with the sponsor firm's attorney for review.
What if I do not know every detail yet?
Start with what you know. You can answer guided questions for a more accurate estimate or add optional details before sharing with the sponsor firm's attorney.