Settlement Wizard

Defective Product Settlement Calculator in Illinois

Estimate a defective product injury settlement range using economic damages, pain & suffering multiplier, and fault adjustment.

AEconomic Damages

Total Economic Damages:$0

BPain & Suffering Multiplier

Multiplier: 3.0xSeverity: Moderate

This estimates non-economic damages (pain, suffering, emotional distress).

CLiability Rule

Strict Liability Applies: In many IL defective product cases, the owner is held liable regardless of fault. This calculator assumes 0% fault on your part.

Illinois Guide to Defective Product Settlement Calculations

How This Calculator Works

This estimator uses the Multiplier Method, a commonly used negotiation framework for estimating a settlement range. It starts by totaling your economic damages (medical bills, and lost wages). Then it applies a pain & suffering multiplier to approximate non-economic damages. Finally, the estimate is adjusted using modified comparative negligence (51% bar) principles or applicable strict liability rules.

What Is the Pain & Suffering Multiplier?

The multiplier reflects the severity and impact of an injury. A value around 1.5 is often used for minor injuries. A value closer to 5 may reflect severe, long-lasting, or life-altering injuries.

Economic vs. Non-Economic Damages

Economic damages (sometimes called “special damages”) are measurable costs such as medical treatment bills and wage loss. Non-economic damages (often called “general damages”) reflect pain, suffering, emotional distress, and reduced quality of life.

Illinois Personal Injury Laws You Should Know

  • Statute of Limitations: In Illinois, you generally have 2 years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit. If you miss this deadline, your case may be permanently dismissed.
  • Small Claims Limit: For smaller disputes, Illinois allows you to sue in Small Claims Court for damages up to $10,000.

Comparative Negligence in Illinois

In many defective product cases, Illinois may apply Strict Liability. This means the owner/manufacturer may be liable regardless of their specific negligence. However, if standard negligence applies,Illinois follows modified comparative negligence (51% bar).

⚠️Defective Product Case Specifics

Primary Focus
Strict Liability & Manufacturing Defects
Key Evidence
The physical product itself (DO NOT repair or discard it)
Main Legal Hurdle
Proving the defect existed when it left the factory and wasn't caused by user modification.
Common Injuries
Burns, Choking hazards, Chemical exposure, Mechanical lacerations
Critical Warning
🚨Statutes of Repose may bar claims on products older than 10-15 years, regardless of injury date.
Regulatory Standard
Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)

Illinois Legal Authority & Reference Data

State Jurisdiction
Illinois
Statute of Limitations
735 ILCS 5/13-202 (2 Years)
Negligence Basis
735 ILCS 5/2-1116
Small Claims Limit
$10,000
Settlement Nuance
No statutory caps on compensatory damages.
Judicial Precedent
Alvis v. Ribar, 85 Ill. 2d 1Source Record →
Case Summary
The Illinois Supreme Court judicially adopted the pure comparative negligence system, though it was later modified to a 51% bar by the legislature.
Legal Significance
Marks the historical shift toward the modern 'shared fault' system in Illinois.

Verified Legal Database Entry • Last Audit: Jan 2026

Methodology & Legal Data Source

Algorithm Basis

This estimate for Illinois applies the standard "Multiplier Method" used by insurance adjusters (1.5x–5x base) adjusted for local negligence rules.

Statutory Constraint:
The calculator logic incorporates the 2-year Statute of Limitations  codified in 735 ILCS 5/13-202.

Data Integrity

Not Legal Advice: This tool is an informational simulation. Settlements vary by judge, venue, and evidence.

Last Legislative Audit: January 2026.
Verified against Illinois Civil Practice Codes.

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