About Settlement Calculator Pro
A neutral settlement calculator site built for clarity.
Settlement Calculator Pro is a free settlement estimate site created to help people understand the math behind settlement ranges before they share personal details, call a law firm, or compare an offer. The site is neutral, browser-based, and designed to explain how settlement estimates work without hiding the calculator behind a lead form.
What is Settlement Calculator Pro?
Settlement Calculator Pro is a neutral settlement calculator and educational estimate site. It helps users test possible settlement ranges by entering visible claim factors such as medical bills, lost wages, injury severity, pain and suffering, shared fault, policy limits, and other claim-specific details.
The site is not a law firm, does not provide legal advice, and does not guarantee any settlement result. It is built to help users understand the math and vocabulary before they decide what to do next.
How Settlement Calculator Pro works
Every calculator should be built around the same simple idea: start with measurable losses, estimate harder-to-measure damages, adjust for claim-specific factors, then show a rounded educational range. The methodology page explains this model in more detail.
Why neutrality matters
A free settlement estimate site should not pressure a user into a phone call before showing basic information. Settlement Calculator Pro is designed to give users a starting range first, then explain what factors may change that range.
What we publish first
The site follows a phased publishing strategy. Foundation pages come first because they help users and search systems understand the brand, privacy model, disclaimer, contact path, and methodology. Calculator clusters are then added only when the pages are complete enough to be useful.
This matters because empty category pages and placeholder links weaken user trust. Settlement Calculator Pro should only point users toward pages that are live, useful, and internally consistent.
Important limitation
Settlement Calculator Pro gives educational estimates only. A calculator cannot inspect evidence, apply every state rule, evaluate witness credibility, predict insurer behavior, or replace professional advice. Users should treat every result as a planning range, not a final settlement demand or legal conclusion.
Questions about Settlement Calculator Pro
These answers clarify what the site is, how it works, and what users should not assume from an educational estimate.
No. Settlement Calculator Pro is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. It is an educational settlement estimate site that explains calculator inputs, settlement math, and common value factors. Users should speak with a qualified professional for legal, tax, insurance, or medical advice.
Yes. The site is designed as a neutral settlement calculator experience. It does not hide the estimate behind a required phone call or lead form, and it does not claim that one calculator result is the final value of a claim.
The calculator model is browser-based. Users can enter numbers and generate an educational range without creating an account. Calculator entries are not sent to our servers from the static calculator pages, and no sign-up is required to see a result.
Ranges are more honest than exact-looking numbers because settlement value depends on evidence, jurisdiction, liability, coverage, policy limits, negotiation, and facts a calculator cannot fully verify. Rounded ranges reduce false precision and make the estimate easier to treat as planning guidance.
Anyone can use the calculators for educational planning, including people comparing an offer, researching a claim, or trying to understand common value factors. The calculators do not replace professional judgment, case review, jurisdiction-specific rules, or actual negotiation strategy.
The sitewide methodology is published on the Methodology page. It explains economic damages, non-economic damages, multiplier method logic, per diem reasoning, fault adjustments, source policy, policy limits, and why estimates are rounded.
Use the calculator with the methodology in mind
The best estimate is one you understand. Start with a live calculator, then review the methodology if you want to see how the range is built.