Neal Caffrey

New Jersey

New Jersey Dog Bite Settlement Calculator & Compensation

New Jersey Dog Bite Settlement Calculator

Victim & Incident Details (Comparative Fault)

Injury Details

Economic Damages & Insurance

Estimated Settlement Value

Total Economic Damages $0
Pain & Suffering $0
Total Estimated Settlement $0
This calculator provides a rough estimate for educational purposes only. It is not legal advice. Estimate is based on New Jersey’s “Strict Liability” law (N.J.S.A. 4:19-16) and “51% Bar” Modified Comparative Fault (N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1). Consult a qualified attorney.

What Is the New Jersey Dog Bite Settlement Calculator?

The New Jersey Dog Bite Settlement Calculator is an interactive online tool that helps victims estimate a potential settlement amount based on:

  • Injury severity
  • Medical costs (past and future)
  • Lost wages or reduced earning capacity
  • Permanent damage or scarring
  • Psychological trauma (like PTSD or anxiety)
  • Comparative fault (e.g., provocation or trespassing)
  • Insurance policy limits

The calculator uses real-world legal factors from New Jersey’s strict liability law (N.J.S.A. 4:19-16) and modified comparative fault rules (N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1).

In simple terms:
If a dog bites you in New Jersey, the owner is automatically liable—unless you were trespassing or provoked the dog. But if you share some fault, your compensation may be reduced.

How Dog Bite Settlements Work in New Jersey

1. Strict Liability Rule

Under New Jersey law, a dog owner is strictly liable for injuries their dog causes.
That means victims don’t have to prove negligence — just that:

  • The defendant owned the dog, and
  • The dog bit the victim, and
  • The victim was not trespassing or provoking the dog.

2. Comparative Fault Rule

New Jersey follows a “51% Bar Rule.”
If the victim is more than 51% at fault, they can’t recover any damages.

For example:

  • If you were 20% at fault (maybe you startled the dog), and your damages were $100,000, your payout drops to $80,000.
  • But if you were 55% at fault, you get nothing.

This system is built into the calculator’s code — it automatically reduces settlement estimates based on provocation or trespassing percentages.

How the Calculator Estimates Your Settlement

Let’s break down the logic behind the New Jersey Dog Bite Settlement Calculator:

Step 1: Input Your Case Details

You’ll enter:

  • Age and gender of the victim
  • Incident location (public property, owner’s home, trespassing)
  • Provocation level (none, minor, significant)

Each of these factors slightly adjusts the outcome using “multipliers” or “fault percentages.”

Step 2: Add Injury Details

The calculator uses the Dunbar Bite Scale (a scientific classification of dog bite severity) and asks about:

  • Injury location (hand, leg, face, etc.)
  • Type of injury (laceration, nerve damage, bone fracture, or scarring)
  • Long-term impact (disability or impairment)
  • Psychological trauma (from mild anxiety to severe PTSD)

Each factor adds a pain and suffering multiplier to economic damages.

Step 3: Enter Economic Damages

You’ll include:

  • Past and future medical expenses
  • Lost wages
  • Reduced earning capacity
  • Property damage (e.g., torn clothes, broken glasses)
  • Insurance policy limit (the maximum the dog owner’s policy will pay)

Step 4: Calculation and Adjustments

The script calculates:

  1. Total economic damages
  2. Pain and suffering (based on severity multipliers)
  3. Comparative fault deduction (if any)
  4. Insurance policy cap (if applicable)

The result:
A realistic estimated settlement range based on New Jersey law and average case data.

Example: How the Math Works

Let’s say:

  • Medical bills: $10,000
  • Future medical: $2,000
  • Lost wages: $3,000
  • Dunbar Level: 4 (deep punctures)
  • Injury: face and neck
  • Psychological impact: severe anxiety
  • Victim fault: 20%

Calculation flow:

  1. Economic damages = $15,000
  2. Pain and suffering = $10,000 × severity multipliers ≈ $60,000
  3. Subtotal = $75,000
  4. 20% fault reduction = -$15,000
    Final estimated settlement = $60,000

If the dog owner’s insurance policy is capped at $50,000, that becomes your maximum payout.

Factors That Can Reduce or Increase Settlement Value

Can Reduce Settlement

  • Victim trespassing or provoking the dog
  • Lack of documented medical treatment
  • Pre-existing injuries
  • Low insurance policy limits

Can Increase Settlement

  • Permanent scarring, especially on visible areas (face or neck)
  • High medical expenses
  • Verified psychological trauma (PTSD diagnosis)
  • Children or elderly victims
  • Dog owner negligence history (prior attacks)

Why “Pain and Suffering” Matters Most

In dog bite cases, pain and suffering often outweighs the medical bills.
Severe or disfiguring bites can lead to:

  • Long-term emotional trauma
  • Loss of self-confidence
  • Nightmares or fear of dogs
  • Social withdrawal

That’s why the calculator’s algorithm applies multiple “emotional impact” multipliers — it mirrors how insurance adjusters and juries typically calculate damages for distress and trauma.

Legal Framework Behind the Calculator

The calculator’s estimate reflects two key New Jersey statutes:

  1. N.J.S.A. 4:19-16 — Strict Liability for Dog Bites
    Holds dog owners responsible for bites in most circumstances.
  2. N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 — Comparative Negligence (51% Bar Rule)
    Adjusts settlement values if the victim shares fault.

The tool is not a substitute for legal advice, but it’s built to follow the same reasoning used in personal injury law and insurance negotiations.

Using the Calculator

  1. Go to the calculator section on this page.
  2. Enter your case information.
  3. Click “Calculate Estimate.”
  4. Review your estimated breakdown:
    • Economic damages
    • Pain & suffering
    • Total estimated settlement
  5. If you see a “Fault Reduction” warning, that means your share of fault reduced the payout.

If the policy limit applies, the calculator will cap your total accordingly.

What To Do After a Dog Bite in New Jersey

  1. Get medical help immediately.
    Document all injuries and treatments.
  2. Report the bite to animal control or the local health department.
  3. Collect evidence:
    • Photos of injuries
    • Witness information
    • Dog owner’s name and insurance details
  4. Talk to a dog bite attorney.
    Even with the calculator, every case has unique factors that only a lawyer can assess — especially for severe injuries or long-term effects.