Uninsured Motorist Claim Calculator
Estimate the potential value of your injury claim when the at-fault driver has no insurance.
Claim Details
We calculate total Economic Damages (Medical + Wages + Property) + Non-Economic Damages (Medical × Multiplier). This total is reduced by your fault percentage. The final result is capped at your selected Uninsured Motorist (UM) policy limit.
Damage Breakdown Analysis
| Category | Calculation | Amount |
|---|
Total Damages
Policy Limit
Fault Deduction
What is an Uninsured Motorist Claim Calculator?
An uninsured motorist claim calculator is a specialized financial tool designed to estimate the potential settlement value of a personal injury claim when the at-fault driver does not have auto insurance. In these scenarios, you must file a claim against your own insurance company under your Uninsured Motorist (UM) coverage.
Unlike standard accident calculators, an uninsured motorist claim calculator must account for specific policy limits set by your own insurer. Even if your damages are extensive, your recovery is strictly capped by the coverage limits you purchased prior to the accident. This calculator helps victims understand the gap between their actual damages and their recoverable settlement.
This tool is ideal for drivers involved in hit-and-run accidents or collisions with drivers who allowed their policies to lapse. However, it is important to note that insurance adjusters use proprietary software (like Colossus) to evaluate claims, so this calculator provides an estimate rather than a guarantee.
Uninsured Motorist Claim Calculator Formula
To accurately estimate a settlement, the uninsured motorist claim calculator uses a multi-step formula that aggregates economic losses, estimates non-economic pain and suffering, adjusts for comparative negligence, and applies policy caps.
The Core Formula:
Total Damages = (Medical Expenses + Lost Wages + Property Damage) + (Medical Expenses × Multiplier)
Net Claim Value = Total Damages × (100% – Your Fault %)
Final Settlement = Minimum(Net Claim Value, Your Policy Limit)
Variable Definitions
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Economic Damages | Quantifiable financial losses (bills, receipts). | USD ($) | $500 – $100,000+ |
| Multiplier | Factor used to estimate pain and suffering. | Number | 1.5x (minor) to 5.0x (severe) |
| Policy Limit | The maximum your insurer will pay per person. | USD ($) | $15k, $25k, $50k, $100k+ |
| Comparative Fault | Your percentage of responsibility for the crash. | Percentage (%) | 0% to 50% |
Practical Examples
Example 1: The Hit-and-Run (Moderate Injury)
Driver A is rear-ended by a driver who flees the scene. Driver A has $25,000 in UM coverage.
- Medical Bills: $4,000
- Lost Wages: $1,000
- Multiplier: 2.0 (moderate whiplash)
- Calculation:
- Economic: $5,000
- Pain & Suffering: $4,000 × 2.0 = $8,000
- Total Value: $13,000
- Result: Since $13,000 is under the $25,000 limit, the estimated settlement is $13,000.
Example 2: Severe Crash with Low Limits
Driver B is hit by an uninsured driver. Driver B has minimum state coverage of $15,000.
- Medical Bills: $15,000
- Multiplier: 3.0 (broken bone)
- Calculation:
- Economic: $15,000
- Pain & Suffering: $15,000 × 3.0 = $45,000
- Total Value: $60,000
- Result: The total value is $60,000, but the policy limit is $15,000. The uninsured motorist claim calculator caps the result at $15,000.
How to Use This Uninsured Motorist Claim Calculator
- Enter Medical Expenses: Input both past bills and estimated future costs for treatments like physical therapy.
- Add Lost Wages: Include income lost for days you missed work due to the accident.
- Select a Multiplier: Use the slider to choose a multiplier.
- 1.5 – 2.0: Minor soft tissue injuries, sprains.
- 2.5 – 3.5: Broken bones, significant recovery time.
- 4.0 – 5.0: Permanent scarring, disability, or traumatic brain injury.
- Set Your Policy Limit: Check your own auto insurance declarations page (e.g., “UM Bodily Injury”) and select the matching limit.
- Adjust Fault %: If police reports indicate you were speeding or partially distracted, adjust the fault slider.
- Review the Chart: The visual bar chart will show if you are hitting your policy ceiling (“Policy Limit Cap”).
Key Factors That Affect Uninsured Motorist Claim Results
Several variables can significantly alter the output of an uninsured motorist claim calculator. Understanding these can help you manage expectations.
- Severity of Injury (The Multiplier): The biggest variable in the formula. Adjusters argue for lower multipliers (1.5x), while attorneys argue for higher ones based on the impact on daily life.
- Documentation Quality: Medical records must explicitly link the injury to the accident. Gaps in treatment can reduce the considered medical expenses, lowering the base for the calculation.
- State Laws on Joint & Several Liability: In some states, if you are even 1% at fault, you might be barred from recovery (Contributory Negligence), though most states use Comparative Negligence logic included in this calculator.
- Stacking Coverage: Some states allow you to “stack” UM limits across multiple vehicles on the same policy, effectively multiplying your available limit. This calculator assumes a single vehicle limit.
- Pre-Existing Conditions: Insurers often try to argue that your pain is from an old injury, not the crash. This reduces the “Medical Expenses” input valid for the claim.
- Property Damage Deductibles: Unlike the at-fault driver’s liability coverage, your UM Property Damage (UMPD) coverage often comes with a deductible (e.g., $250) that reduces the payout.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Related Tools and Internal Resources
- Pain and Suffering Multiplier Calculator – A deeper dive into how general damages are estimated based on injury severity.
- Personal Injury Statute of Limitations Guide – Check how long you have to file your uninsured motorist claim in your state.
- Understanding Bodily Injury Policy Limits – Learn why 25/50 limits might be insufficient for serious accidents.
- Lost Wages Calculator – A dedicated tool for calculating complex income loss scenarios including bonuses and commissions.
- Comparative Negligence by State – Find out if your state uses pure or modified comparative fault rules.
- Stacking Insurance Coverage Explained – Learn how to potentially increase your policy limit by combining vehicles.