A Florida personal injury estimate is a starting point, not a promise. The same incident can look very different once medical records, responsibility facts, insurance coverage, and timing are clearer. The goal is to organize the facts so a cautious range can be shown before you decide whether to share anything with the sponsor firm's attorney.

Important: canisuesomebody.com is not a law firm, does not provide legal advice, and does not guarantee any outcome. Estimates are informational and can change as facts are reviewed.

Fault and responsibility facts

Case value usually depends first on what happened and who may be responsible. Helpful facts can include whether another driver received a citation, whether a store or restaurant created or ignored a hazard, whether witnesses saw the incident, and whether the facts are disputed.

If you are not sure who was at fault, that does not mean you cannot start. It just means the estimate may need to stay cautious until more details are known.

Injuries and treatment

The type of injury, the care received, and how long symptoms continue can matter. Emergency care, urgent care, imaging, dental care, specialist visits, therapy, surgery, or a long recovery period can all change how a case is reviewed.

It is also useful to know whether treatment is complete, still ongoing, or not started yet. An early estimate often changes after records and bills are available.

Medical bills, records, and future care

Bills and records help show what care was needed and what the injury caused. Future treatment, missed work, lasting limitations, and follow-up recommendations can also affect how an attorney reviews a claim.

Evidence that supports the story

Reports, photos, video, witness names, messages, receipts, and medical records can all help connect the incident to the injury. A case can still be worth reviewing without every item, but stronger evidence can make the estimate more reliable.

Insurance and practical recovery limits

Insurance coverage can affect what recovery is realistically available. Auto policies, uninsured motorist coverage, commercial policies, property-owner coverage, and policy limits may all matter. An online estimate cannot confirm coverage, so it should be treated as a cautious first pass.

Timing and attorney review

Timing matters because records can be lost, memories can fade, and legal deadlines may apply. This page is only general information, so a lawyer should review deadline questions for a specific matter.

Start with your own facts

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Describe what happened in your own words. AI helps organize the facts, estimate rules calculate a cautious range, and nothing is shared with the sponsor firm's attorney unless you choose to share after seeing it.

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Frequently asked questions

Is this an average settlement value?

No. This site does not publish average settlement promises. The estimate is a cautious range based on the facts entered and can change when treatment, coverage, and responsibility facts are reviewed.

Do I need every detail before starting?

No. Start with what you know. You can answer follow-up questions or add optional details later if you want a more accurate estimate before sharing the case.

Do I have to share contact information to see an estimate?

No. The estimate appears first. Contact information and authorization are requested only if you choose to share your case with the sponsor firm's attorney for review.