⚖️ Personal Injury

Personal Injury Settlement Calculator

50-state estimator with fault system logic and real jury verdict averages.

⚠️ Important: This tool provides a generalized, illustrative estimate based on legal rules and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Always consult a qualified personal injury attorney for a professional case evaluation.
⚖️ 50-State Aware
0%
📊 Settlement Analysis
Conservative
$0
Mid-Estimate
$0
Optimistic
$0
📊 Your State's Average Settlement
$52,000
🛡️ Estimated Collectible Range
$0 – $0
📋 Case Diagnostics
Click "Calculate Settlement" to generate your report.
📌 About this estimate: This is a generalized, illustrative range based on personal injury legal rules. This is not legal advice.

Average Personal Injury Settlements by State (2026)

Based on jury verdict data and insurance settlement averages.

California $75,000
Texas $52,000
Florida $60,000
New York $80,000
Illinois $58,000
Pennsylvania $55,000
Ohio $48,000
Georgia $50,000
North Carolina $45,000
Michigan $52,000
New Jersey $65,000
Virginia $48,000
Washington $55,000
Massachusetts $62,000
Arizona $50,000
Tennessee $45,000
Indiana $42,000
Missouri $48,000
Maryland $50,000
Wisconsin $44,000
Colorado $52,000
Minnesota $48,000
South Carolina $42,000
Alabama $38,000
Louisiana $40,000
Kentucky $42,000
Oregon $50,000
Oklahoma $40,000
Connecticut $55,000
Iowa $42,000
Mississippi $35,000
Arkansas $38,000
Kansas $40,000
Utah $45,000
Nebraska $42,000
West Virginia $40,000
Nevada $50,000
New Mexico $42,000
Idaho $40,000
Hawaii $50,000
Maine $45,000
New Hampshire $48,000
Rhode Island $50,000
Montana $40,000
Delaware $48,000
South Dakota $38,000
North Dakota $40,000
Vermont $45,000
Wyoming $40,000
Alaska $55,000

Averages based on 2026 jury verdict research and insurance settlement data.

How Your Calculator Works: A State-by-State Breakdown

Your personal injury settlement estimate is generated using a multi-factor algorithm that accounts for your state's specific legal framework, injury severity, and insurance realities. Here's what happens behind the scenes when you click "Calculate Settlement":

Step 1: State-Specific Legal Rules

The calculator first determines your state's fault system. This is the most critical factor in your estimate because it establishes whether you can recover at all and by how much your recovery is reduced.

  • Pure Comparative Fault (AK, AZ, CA, FL, KY, LA, MS, MO, NY, NM, RI, WA): You can recover even if you're 99% at fault, but your award is reduced by your fault percentage.
  • Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar) (AR, CO, CT, DE, FL, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, ME, MI, MN, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, ND, OK, OR, PA, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WV, WI, WY): You're barred from recovery if you're 51% or more at fault.
  • Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar) (GA, KS, OH): You're barred from recovery if you're 50% or more at fault.
  • Contributory Negligence (AL, MD, NC, VA, DC): Even 1% fault bars all recovery. This is the most restrictive system.

Step 2: Economic Damages Calculation

The calculator totals your economic damages: medical expenses + lost wages. These are the only damages with a fixed dollar amount.

Step 3: Multiplier Application

Your non-economic damages (pain and suffering) are calculated using the multiplier method. The multiplier is dynamically determined by:

  • Injury Severity: Minor (1.5–2×), Moderate (2.5–3.5×), Severe (4–5.5×), Catastrophic (6–8.5×)
  • Case Type Boost: Truck accidents get +20% due to commercial insurance, medical malpractice gets +10% due to specialized legal requirements
  • State-Specific Average: The calculator references real jury verdict data to calibrate the multiplier to your state's typical outcomes

Step 4: Fault Reduction

Your total is reduced by your fault percentage (if you're not barred from recovery). Example: $100,000 case value × 70% (if 30% at fault) = $70,000 final recovery.

Step 5: Insurance Reality Filter

The calculator then applies the insurance reality filter to show what you can actually collect. If your calculated value exceeds the at-fault party's policy limit, your recovery is capped at the policy limit (unless you have UM/UIM coverage). This is why selecting your policy limit changes your collectible range.

Step 6: State-Specific Average Reference

Finally, your calculator displays your state's average settlement based on 2026 jury verdict data. This gives you a benchmark to compare against your personalized estimate.

📌 Why This Matters for Your Case

Understanding how your estimate is calculated helps you identify gaps in your documentation before entering settlement negotiations. If your Mid-Estimate is significantly higher than your state's average, you need strong evidence to support the higher value. If it's lower, you may need to strengthen your liability argument or document additional damages.

Frequently Asked Questions About Personal Injury Settlements

What does the "Mid-Estimate" in the calculator mean?

The Mid-Estimate represents the statistically probable settlement value based on your specific inputs and your state's legal framework. It's calculated using: (Medical Bills + Lost Wages) × Severity Multiplier × (1 - Fault Percentage). This is not a guaranteed payout but the figure around which actual settlements typically cluster when liability is clear and injuries are well-documented. The Low and High estimates represent the realistic range (±25%) that accounts for variables like insurance policy limits and negotiation leverage.

Why does my state's fault system change my estimate so dramatically?

Your state's fault system directly impacts how much you can recover. In pure comparative fault states (CA, FL, NY), you can recover even if 99% at fault—your award simply reduces by your fault percentage. In modified comparative fault states (TX, IL, GA), you're barred from recovery if you're 51% or more at fault (or 50% in some states like GA). In contributory negligence states (AL, MD, NC, VA), even 1% fault bars all recovery. Your calculator applies these rules automatically—selecting your state adjusts the legal parameters behind the scenes.

How does the calculator determine my pain and suffering multiplier?

Your multiplier is determined by injury severity, case type, and how the injury impacts your daily life. The calculator uses a dynamic range based on real jury verdict data: Minor injuries (soft tissue, whiplash) use 1.5–2×; Moderate injuries (fractures requiring surgery) use 2.5–3.5×; Severe injuries (permanent disability, amputation) use 4–5.5×; Catastrophic injuries (TBI, spinal cord damage) use 6–8.5×. The calculator then applies case-type boosts—truck accidents get +20% due to commercial insurance, medical malpractice gets +10% due to specialized legal requirements.

What's the difference between economic and non-economic damages?

Economic damages are tangible losses you can document with receipts and bills: medical expenses, lost wages, property damage, and future care costs. Your calculator totals these first. Non-economic damages are subjective losses: physical pain, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and loss of companionship. These are calculated using your state's legal standards and the multiplier method. The key insight: economic damages are never capped in any state; non-economic damages are capped in many states (particularly for medical malpractice).

Should I accept the first settlement offer the calculator shows?

No. The calculator shows a floor, not a ceiling. Insurance adjusters' first offers typically represent 30-50% of the final settlement reached through negotiation. Your calculator's Mid-Estimate represents what your case is worth with full documentation and skilled negotiation. Real settlements increase when you can document all medical expenses (including projected future care), demonstrate clear liability through evidence like dashcam footage or police reports, and present a credible threat of trial.

How do insurance policy limits affect my actual recovery?

Your recovery is capped by the at-fault party's insurance policy limits. Your calculator includes an "Insurance Reality" filter showing the collectible range—if your calculated value exceeds available coverage, your actual recovery is limited to the policy limits (unless you have UM/UIM coverage or can pursue other liable parties). This is why truck accidents (with $750,000+ commercial policies) often yield larger settlements than personal auto accidents (with $25,000–$100,000 limits).

What is the average personal injury settlement in my state?

Your calculator displays your state's average settlement based on jury verdict research and insurance settlement data. Nationally, the median settlement is approximately $40,500–$52,000, but this varies dramatically: California averages $75,000; Texas averages $52,000; Florida averages $60,000; New York averages $80,000. These averages factor in case type (car accidents settle lower than truck accidents), injury severity (minor injuries settle lower than catastrophic), and state-specific legal rules (contributory negligence states have lower average recoveries).

How long will my case take to settle?

Settlement timelines vary based on case complexity, injury severity, and liability clarity. Simple cases (clear liability, minor injuries, adequate insurance): 3–6 months. Moderate cases (disputed liability, moderate injuries, multiple treatment providers): 6–18 months. Complex cases (severe injuries, contested liability, multiple defendants, catastrophic damages): 1–3 years. Your calculator helps you understand your case's complexity level by showing how changes in inputs (like adding FMCSR violations or changing the state) affect the timeline estimate.

Do I need a lawyer to use this calculator effectively?

While you can use the calculator independently, it functions as a diagnostic tool to help you understand your case value before consulting an attorney. Victims with attorneys typically settle for 3.5× more than those who negotiate alone. Your calculator helps you identify whether an insurance offer is fair—if it's significantly below your Mid-Estimate, it's worth a lawyer's review. Most personal injury attorneys work on contingency (no win, no fee), so there's no upfront cost to get professional feedback.

How does the "serious injury threshold" affect my claim in no-fault states?

In no-fault states (FL, NY, MI, MN, NJ, PA, HI, KS, KY, MA, ND, UT), your own insurance (PIP) covers initial medical bills regardless of fault. You can only sue for pain and suffering if your injury meets the legal "serious injury" threshold: permanent injury, significant disfigurement, or disability lasting 90+ days. Your calculator accounts for this by showing a lower collectible estimate in no-fault states unless you qualify for the serious injury exception. This is why your state selection dramatically changes the calculator output.

Legal & Financial Disclaimer: This estimator is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed. Results are hypothetical and based on general formulas; actual case values depend on jurisdiction, evidence, liability, insurance limits, and many other factors. You should not rely on this estimate for any legal or financial decisions. Always consult a licensed personal injury attorney for a professional case evaluation.