Civil Penalty & Damages Estimator

Estimates total civil liability including compensatory damages, punitive damages, statutory penalties, and attorney fee exposure based on violation parameters and jurisdiction multipliers.

Direct economic harm: lost wages, medical bills, property loss, etc.
Each violation or claimant may trigger separate statutory penalties.
Override the default statutory amount if your jurisdiction differs.
Longer duration increases penalty multipliers in many statutes.

Formulas Used

1. Compensatory Damages
Economic = Actual Damages
Non-Economic = Actual Damages × (Severity Multiplier − 1)
Compensatory = Economic + Non-Economic

2. Statutory Penalties
Statutory Total = Per-Violation Penalty × Number of Violations × Duration Multiplier
Duration Multiplier = 1 + (months − 1) × 0.04, capped at 24 months (max 1.92×)
For treble-damage statutes (Sherman Act, some UDAP): Statutory = Compensatory × 2 (the extra 2× beyond actual)

3. Punitive Damages
Punitive = Compensatory × Conduct Multiplier × Size Multiplier × Prior Violation Multiplier
Capped at 9× Compensatory per BMW of North America v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559 (1996) and State Farm v. Campbell, 538 U.S. 408 (2003).
Conduct multipliers: Negligent 0×, Reckless 1.5×, Intentional 3×, Malicious 5×
Size multipliers: Individual 0.5×, Mid-Size 1×, Large 2×, Enterprise 3.5×
Prior violation multipliers: None 1×, 1–2 prior 1.25×, 3–5 prior 1.6×, 6+ prior 2×

4. Pre-Judgment Interest
Interest = Compensatory × Annual Rate × Years (simple interest)

5. Attorney Fee Exposure
Attorney Fees ≈ Subtotal × 30% (lodestar approximation under fee-shifting statutes)

6. Grand Total
Total = Compensatory + Statutory + Punitive + Interest + Attorney Fees

Assumptions & References

  • Punitive damages are constitutionally limited by the Due Process Clause per BMW v. Gore (1996) and State Farm v. Campbell (2003); single-digit ratios to compensatory damages are the norm.
  • Attorney fee exposure uses a 30% lodestar approximation; actual fees depend on hours, rates, and court approval under Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424 (1983).
  • This tool provides estimates only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney for case-specific analysis.

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