Mediation Settlement Calculator
Analyze legal settlement offers vs. trial risks to make informed decisions.
Evaluation Inputs
$0.00
0%
$0.00
Settlement vs. Trial Scenarios
Financial Breakdown
| Category | Settlement Now | Trial (Win Scenario) | Trial (Risk Adjusted) |
|---|
* “Trial (Risk Adjusted)” accounts for the probability of losing (getting $0) and still owing sunk costs.
What is a Mediation Settlement Calculator?
A mediation settlement calculator is a financial decision-making tool used by plaintiffs, attorneys, and mediators to evaluate whether to accept a settlement offer or proceed to trial. In civil litigation, the choice between settling and litigating involves complex variables, including legal fees, court costs, and, most importantly, the probability of success.
This calculator performs a “Decision Tree Analysis” (DTA) to determine the Expected Value of your case. It compares the guaranteed “bird in the hand” (the settlement) against the potential “two in the bush” (the trial verdict), adjusted for risk and expense.
Who should use this tool?
- Plaintiffs in personal injury, employment, or business disputes.
- Attorneys looking to visualize case value for clients.
- Mediators helping parties bridge the gap between demands and offers.
Common Misconceptions: Many litigants look solely at the gross verdict amount (“I could win $1 million”). However, they often fail to account for the substantial reduction caused by contingency fees, expert witness costs, and the statistical chance of a defense verdict (losing the case completely).
Mediation Settlement Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The core logic behind the mediation settlement calculator rests on comparing two net numbers: the Net Settlement Value and the Net Expected Value of Trial.
1. Net Settlement Value
This is the actual cash the plaintiff pockets if they accept the offer today.
Formula:
Net Settlement = Offer - (Offer × Fee%) - Costs Incurred
2. Net Expected Value (EV) of Trial
This value is a weighted average of all possible trial outcomes. It mathematically accounts for the risk of losing.
Formula:
EV Gross = (Projected Verdict × Win Probability) + ($0 × Lose Probability)
Net EV = EV Gross - (EV Gross × Fee%) - (Costs Incurred + Future Costs)
Variable Definitions
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Settlement Offer | Guaranteed amount offered now | USD ($) | $1k – $10M+ |
| Projected Verdict | Amount awarded if you win trial | USD ($) | Usually 2-5x Offer |
| Win Probability | Likelihood of jury ruling in favor | Percent (%) | 30% – 80% |
| Contingency Fee | Attorney’s cut of the gross | Percent (%) | 33.3% – 40% |
| Future Costs | Expenses to get through trial | USD ($) | $5k – $100k+ |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: The Personal Injury Case
Scenario: Jane was injured in a slip-and-fall. The insurance company offers $50,000. Her lawyer believes a jury would award $150,000, but there is only a 60% chance of winning because liability is disputed. To go to trial, they need to spend another $10,000 on medical experts. The lawyer charges 33.3%.
- Net Settlement: $50,000 – 33.3% = $33,350 (approx).
- Trial Gross EV: $150,000 × 60% = $90,000.
- Trial Net EV: $90,000 – 33.3% – $10,000 (costs) = $50,030.
Decision: The risk-adjusted value of trial ($50k) is significantly higher than the settlement ($33k). Jane might reject the offer or use this data to demand a higher settlement closer to $75,000.
Example 2: The High-Risk Business Dispute
Scenario: A small business is suing a vendor. Offer is $100,000. Verdict potential is $500,000. However, the contract is vague, so the win probability is only 30%. Trial costs are high at $50,000.
- Net Settlement: ~$66,000 (after fees).
- Trial Gross EV: $500,000 × 30% = $150,000.
- Trial Net EV: $150,000 – 33% – $50,000 = $50,500.
Decision: Even though the potential verdict ($500k) is huge, the Expected Value ($50.5k) is lower than the settlement ($66k) due to low probability and high costs. Accepting the $100,000 settlement is the mathematically superior choice.
How to Use This Mediation Settlement Calculator
- Enter the Offer: Input the current gross cash offer from the opposing party.
- Estimate the Verdict: Input what you believe a jury would award if everything goes perfectly. Be realistic—do not input the “dream” number, but the “likely” number.
- Assess Probability: Input your confidence level. A “toss-up” case is 50%. A strong case might be 70-80%. Rarely is any case 100%.
- Input Costs & Fees: Enter your attorney’s percentage and the hard costs (filing fees, experts) required to get to the finish line.
- Review Results: The calculator will show you the “Net Expected Value.”
- If Net Trial EV > Net Settlement, you might consider proceeding or negotiating harder.
- If Net Trial EV < Net Settlement, the offer is statistically good, and settling removes the risk of losing.
Key Factors That Affect Mediation Settlement Results
Several variables impact the final calculation beyond simple math:
- 1. Probability of Liability vs. Damages: You might have a 90% chance of proving the defendant is at fault, but only a 50% chance of proving the extent of your injuries. The combined probability is 0.90 × 0.50 = 45%.
- 2. Increasing Costs Over Time: Litigation gets more expensive the longer it drags on. Expert depositions and trial transcripts can run into tens of thousands of dollars, eating directly into your net recovery.
- 3. The “Trial Tax” (Stress & Time): This calculator measures money, but not time. If a trial takes 2 years to resolve, the “Time Value of Money” (inflation) reduces the real value of that future verdict compared to cash today.
- 4. Attorney Fee Tiers: Some retainer agreements increase the fee from 33% to 40% once a lawsuit is filed or trial begins. This jump significantly raises the bar for how much you need to win at trial to break even.
- 5. Collectability: Winning a $1 million verdict is useless if the defendant is bankrupt or uninsured. A lower settlement from an insurance policy is often better than an uncollectable judgment.
- 6. Tax Implications: While physical injury settlements are often tax-free, interest on judgments or punitive damages may be taxable. A settlement can sometimes be structured to minimize tax liability compared to a general verdict.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)