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Free Legal & Career Calculators —Know What You're Owed

Personal injury settlement, workers comp, overtime, severance — free, instant, no account needed. No data ever stored.

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10 Free Legal & Career Calculators

All results are estimates for informational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. Always consult a qualified lawyer before making any legal or career decision.
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Personal Injury Settlement Calculator
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How it works

Why LawCalc Numbers Are Reliable

All calculations run right in your browser using published FLSA rules, state workers comp schedules, and industry norms. Nothing ever leaves your device.

1. Enter your details

Type in your wages, expenses, or job details. Every field has sensible defaults — get a result in under 30 seconds.

2. See results instantly

No submit button. Results update live as you adjust inputs — explore low, standard, and high scenarios in real time.

3. Know your number

Walk into any negotiation or attorney consultation knowing your realistic range — based on published formulas, not guesswork.

No account required No data stored or shared Runs entirely in your browser Free — always
FAQ

Workers Rights & Career Calculator FAQ

Straight answers to the questions workers and job seekers search for most.

Personal injury settlements use the multiplier method: add economic damages (medical bills, lost wages, property damage), then multiply by a pain and suffering factor (1.5–5×) based on injury severity, adjusted for your share of liability. Use the PI Settlement Calculator above to model your low, mid, and high range.
Workers comp benefits are typically 66.7% of your average weekly wage, capped at your state's maximum. The national average is about $632/week. State maximums range from $594 (Mississippi) to over $2,200 (Iowa). Use the Workers Comp Calculator for a state-specific estimate.
Federal law (FLSA) requires overtime at 1.5× your regular rate for all hours worked beyond 40 in a single workweek. California also has daily overtime thresholds (over 8 hrs/day). Use the Overtime Pay Calculator for exact FLSA figures.
The industry standard is one week of pay per year of service for white-collar employees. Executives often receive two to four weeks per year. On a $70,000 salary with 5 years of service, standard severance is about $6,731. The Severance Calculator models low, standard, and generous scenarios.
Enforceability varies by state. California, Minnesota, and North Dakota effectively ban non-compete enforcement. Florida aggressively enforces them. In most states, courts look at duration (12–24 months is reasonable), geographic scope, and legitimate business interest. Use the Non-Compete Risk Calculator for your state.
True total compensation includes base salary, bonus, employer health insurance contributions, 401k match, PTO days (worth your daily rate), and remote work value (~$4,600/year for fully remote). Commute costs are subtracted. The Job Offer Comparison Calculator handles all of this side by side.
Wrongful termination damages include back pay (wages lost from termination to settlement), front pay (future wage loss), and emotional distress. The average EEOC settlement is $40,000, but jury awards average $200,000. Discrimination and retaliation cases can also qualify for punitive damages. Use the Wrongful Termination Calculator above for an estimate based on your specifics.
A 5% raise on a $60,000 salary is $3,000 gross — but at 25% effective tax, the real after-tax annual gain is $2,250, or $187.50/month. The Raise Impact Calculator shows your per-paycheck increase and the 5, 10, and 20-year cumulative value.
Contractors pay 15.3% self-employment tax and must cover their own benefits, adding $14,000–$18,000/year in costs. As a rule of thumb, a contract hourly rate needs to be 25–40% higher than the FTE equivalent to break even. The Contractor vs Full-Time Calculator shows your exact break-even rate.
A $7,000 raise at age 30, with 3% annual raises and 25% effective tax, is worth over $370,000 in lifetime after-tax earnings. The Salary Negotiation Calculator models your exact lifetime gain and gives you a negotiation anchor.
AWW is your total wages in the 52 weeks before your injury divided by 52. WC benefits are set at 66.7% of AWW, capped at your state's maximum. Some states (Iowa, Massachusetts) use different replacement rates. The Workers Comp Calculator computes AWW automatically from your annual salary.
Yes — 38% of workers who ask receive a better package. Key negotiating points: extend the payout period, continue health insurance, add outplacement services, and request accelerated equity vesting. The Severance Calculator shows your ranges so you know exactly where to anchor your ask.
Most states give you 2–3 years from the date of injury to file. Louisiana has the shortest at 1 year; Minnesota and North Dakota allow up to 6 years. The discovery rule can extend the clock when injuries are not immediately apparent. Our state data table shows the statute of limitations for all 50 states.
A 4% match on an $80,000 salary is $3,200/year in free money. Over 30 years with 7% growth, that compounds to over $320,000. The Job Offer Comparison Calculator converts the annual 401k match to a dollar value so you can compare offers correctly.
Key value-increasing factors: clear liability, high ongoing medical expenses, documented lost income and reduced earning capacity, severe or permanent injuries, and strong evidence of pain and suffering. Insurance policy limits can cap the realistic settlement. Use the Personal Injury Settlement Calculator above to model how injury severity and liability affect your estimate.
Reference Data · 2025–2026

Workers Comp Benefits & Personal Injury Data by State

Max weekly workers comp benefit, AWW replacement rate, average PI settlement range, and personal injury statute of limitations for all 50 US states.

All 50 states
Click Use State to pre-load that state's weekly maximum into the Workers Comp Calculator above.
State Max Weekly WC Use State

* Max weekly WC benefit = maximum compensation rate for temporary total disability. Source: NCCI, state WC boards, 2025 schedules.

* PI settlement ranges are broad averages across claim types. Not legal advice — consult an attorney for your situation.

Calculate your workers comp benefit now

Use your state's weekly maximum in the Workers Comp Calculator for a personalized estimate.

Reference Data · 2024–2025

Average Personal Injury Settlement Amounts by Case Type

National average settlement ranges for 20 common personal injury claim types, with median outcomes, typical multipliers, and the key factors that push settlements higher or lower.

All 20 case types
Click Use in PI Calc to pre-load the typical multiplier for that case type into the Personal Injury Settlement Calculator above.
Case Type Avg Settlement Range Use in PI Calc

* Settlement ranges are national averages across all injury severities for that case type. Actual settlements vary based on jurisdiction, insurance limits, injury severity, liability clarity, and legal representation.

* Sources: NAMIC claims data, RAND Institute for Civil Justice, Insurance Research Council, attorneys' reported case outcomes. Data reflects 2020–2025 settlements. Not legal advice.

Calculate your own settlement estimate

Enter your medical expenses, lost wages, and injury severity into the Personal Injury Settlement Calculator for a personalised range.

Seen your state's numbers? Open any calculator above and get a personalised estimate in under a minute.

Free Guides

Legal & Career Guides

Deep-dive guides that explain the law and the math behind every calculator — so you understand your number, not just what it is.

⚖️ Legal

Personal Injury Settlement Value: What to Realistically Expect

How settlement multipliers work, what factors move the number, and how to calculate your realistic range before you accept anything.

🦺 Legal

Workers' Comp Benefits: How the Math Actually Works

AWW, state maximums, TTD vs PPD vs PTD — the complete breakdown of how your workers comp benefit is calculated by state.

💼 Career

Salary Negotiation: The Numbers Behind a Winning Counteroffer

The anchoring formula, market benchmarks, and exact scripts that turn a salary conversation into a data-driven negotiation.

⏱️ Legal

Overtime Pay: How to Calculate Exactly What You're Owed

FLSA rules, exempt vs non-exempt, the regular rate of pay formula, and how to recover unpaid overtime wages going back three years.

⚠️ Legal

Wrongful Termination: What It Means and What You Can Recover

Back pay, front pay, emotional distress, punitive damages — how wrongful termination claims are valued and what the statute of limitations means for your case.

📦 Legal / Career

Severance Pay: What's Standard, What's Negotiable, and How to Calculate It

The ADEA waiver, general release of claims, WARN Act rights, and the exact formula to calculate whether the package on the table is fair.

📋 Career

Job Offer Comparison: How to Evaluate Two Offers Beyond Salary

Total compensation math, equity valuation, career trajectory value, and the side-by-side comparison that reveals which offer actually pays more.

📈 Career

How Much Is a Raise Really Worth After Taxes and Benefits?

Marginal vs effective tax rate, the open enrollment trap, inflation-adjusted raises, and why the compounding case for negotiating hard on every raise matters.

🔒 Legal

Non-Compete Agreements: What They Cost You and When They're Enforceable

State-by-state enforceability, the FTC rule's current status, how non-competes suppress wages, and how to negotiate before you sign.

🔄 Career / Legal

Contractor vs Employee: The True Cost Difference That Changes Everything

Self-employment tax, benefits replacement, the rate equivalence formula, and how to tell if your contractor classification is actually legal.

Career

Real Hourly Rate for Salaried Workers: How to Calculate It

The three-stage formula that includes actual hours, total compensation, and commute — and why the number changes how you evaluate every job offer.

⚖️ Legal

Comp Time vs Overtime Pay: What It Is and Which Is Worth More

Why comp time is illegal for private-sector non-exempt employees, where it's permitted, and how to calculate whether it's actually equivalent to overtime cash.

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