Florida Car Accident Settlement Calculator

Rebbeca Jones

Rebbeca Jones

Florida Car Accident Settlement Calculator

Estimate your potential settlement based on Florida guidelines.

Enter the value of your vehicle *before* the accident. This is for your Property Damage claim.

Minor Moderate Totaled

Under Florida’s No-Fault law, you generally cannot recover pain & suffering (non-economic) damages unless your injury is considered “serious” (e.g., significant permanent injury, significant scarring, death).

Florida follows “Pure Comparative Negligence”. Your recovery is reduced by your fault percentage, but never fully barred (even if over 50%).

Florida requires $10k PD & $10k PIP. BI is optional but shown at common minimum ($10k/$20k). Your payout is capped by these limits.

Estimated Settlement Range

$0 – $0

Economic Damages: $0

Non-Economic Damages: $0

Total Property Damage: $0


Est. Total (Before Fault): $0

Fault Reduction (0%): $0

Est. Final Payout: $0

Disclaimer: This is a simplified estimate for educational purposes only. It is not legal advice. Florida is a “No-Fault” state; use your $10k PIP first. You can only recover non-economic damages (pain & suffering) from the at-fault party if your injury meets the “serious injury threshold”. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault (“Pure Comparative Negligence”) and capped by the at-fault driver’s insurance limits.

What Is the Florida Car Accident Settlement Calculator?

The Florida Car Accident Settlement Calculator is a tool designed to estimate your potential payout from a car crash claim under Florida’s unique insurance laws. It considers:

  • Your medical bills
  • Lost wages
  • Vehicle damage
  • Severity of your injuries
  • Whether the serious injury threshold is met
  • Your percentage of fault
  • The insurance limits of the at-fault driver

It’s not a lawyer, but it’s a smart way to get a ballpark figure before you talk to one.

How Florida Law Affects Car Accident Settlements

Florida is a no-fault state, which means your own insurance pays for the first $10,000 in medical bills and lost wages — through Personal Injury Protection (PIP). But if your injuries are serious enough, you can step outside the no-fault system and sue the other driver.

Here’s what that means:

  • PIP covers: 80% of medical costs, 60% of lost wages, up to $10,000
  • To sue for pain & suffering, your injury must meet the “serious injury threshold” (permanent injury, significant scarring, loss of function)

If you qualify, the calculator can estimate general damages (like pain and suffering) on top of economic losses.

How the Calculator Works: The Logic Behind the Numbers

The calculator doesn’t just spit out random numbers. It follows a clear formula based on personal injury settlement norms and Florida law. Here’s how it breaks things down:

1. Economic Damages

These include:

  • Medical bills (current + future)
  • Lost wages
  • Property damage (cost to repair or replace your car)

2. General Damages (Pain & Suffering)

Multiplied by a severity score:

  • Minor injuries: 1.5×
  • Moderate injuries: 2.5×
  • Serious injuries: 3.5×
  • Severe injuries: 5.0×

Add-ons may boost your multiplier:

  • DUI by the other driver? +1.0
  • You hired a lawyer? +0.5
  • Long recovery time? +0.3 to +0.5
  • Police report? +0.2
    Negative impact (like pre-existing conditions) can reduce the multiplier.

Note: If you don’t meet Florida’s injury threshold, your general damages = $0.

Example: What You Might See

Let’s say:

  • Medical bills: $5,000
  • Lost wages: $2,000
  • Future medical: $1,000
  • Property damage: $8,000
  • Moderate injury (2.5× multiplier)
  • You were 10% at fault
  • At-fault driver has $10K BI and $10K PD limits

After the calculator factors in all adjustments (fault, caps, multiplier), it might return something like:

Estimated Final Settlement: $13,000

  • Bodily Injury Claim: $10,000 (capped by insurance)
  • Property Damage Claim: $3,000 (after 10% fault reduction)

What the Calculator Factors In (And Why It Matters)

InputWhy It Matters
Medical BillsForms the base of economic damages
Lost WagesAdds to the total compensation
Recovery TimeLonger = higher suffering multiplier
Vehicle Damage SeverityImpacts the pain & suffering factor
Fault %Florida uses pure comparative negligence. 20% at fault = 20% deduction
Insurance Policy LimitsYour final payout is capped here
Serious Injury ThresholdNeeded to claim general damages
DUI, Witnesses, Lawyer, etc.These increase your leverage and payout potential

Disclaimer: This Is Just an Estimate

This calculator is not legal advice, and it doesn’t replace speaking with a qualified Florida car accident attorney. It’s an estimate tool based on:

  • Pure comparative negligence
  • Florida’s no-fault rules
  • Typical personal injury formulas

The final settlement depends on many real-world factors — documentation, negotiation skills, insurance adjusters, and whether you go to court.

Why Use This Calculator?

  • Quick insight without waiting for a lawyer
  • See how different factors affect your payout
  • Prepare for negotiations with insurers
  • Understand whether it’s worth hiring an attorney

Try the Calculator Now

If you’ve been in a car accident in Florida, plug your numbers into the calculator. It’s fast, private, and gives you a solid starting point.

Use the Florida Car Accident Settlement Calculator