Estimate your medical malpractice case value based on economic damages, injury severity, your state's non-economic damage cap, and the strength of your liability evidence.
Medical malpractice cases are among the most complex in personal injury law. This tool models economic damages, pain & suffering, state caps, and liability risk.
💊 Medical & Economic Damages
⚕️ Injury & Case Factors
Fill in your damages above and click Calculate to see your estimate.
⚠️ Estimate only — not legal advice. Attorney fees (typically 33–40%) are not deducted from this figure. Consult a licensed attorney before making any decisions.
Medical malpractice cases have the lowest success rate of any personal injury claim type — plaintiffs win only about 20–30% of cases that go to trial. Most states require a Certificate of Merit or expert affidavit before filing. Proving that a doctor deviated from the accepted standard of care AND that the deviation caused your injury requires expensive expert witnesses and years of litigation. Do not decide whether to pursue a claim based on this calculator alone. Only a licensed medical malpractice attorney reviewing your full medical records can evaluate your case. These estimates are for educational purposes only.
To win, you must prove: (1) a doctor-patient relationship existed; (2) the doctor deviated from the accepted standard of care; (3) the deviation caused your injury; and (4) you suffered quantifiable damages. All four must be proven.
Economic damages (medical bills, lost wages) are uncapped in most states. Non-economic damages (pain & suffering) are subject to caps in ~30 states. These caps dramatically affect settlement value in catastrophic cases.
Med mal cases live and die on expert testimony. You need a qualified physician in the same specialty to testify that the defendant's care fell below the standard. These experts are expensive and their opinions vary widely.
Med mal deadlines are typically 2–3 years from the date of injury or discovery, with special rules for minors, foreign objects, and fraudulent concealment. Missing the deadline permanently bars your claim.
Many states require filing a Notice of Intent, obtaining a Certificate of Merit, or submitting to a medical review panel before filing suit. These pre-suit steps add months to the process and cost money upfront.
Both the treating physician and the hospital may be liable depending on employment status, credentialing failures, and systemic problems. Hospitals typically carry higher insurance limits ($5M–$20M+), which significantly affects recoverable amounts.
Medical malpractice cases require specialized attorneys. Most med mal lawyers take cases on contingency — no upfront cost. Get a professional case evaluation before deciding whether to pursue your claim.
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