How Settlement Allocator rules vary in Idaho

How Settlement Allocator rules vary in Idaho

2 min read

Published August 3, 2025 • Updated May 12, 2026 • By DocketMath Team

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Idaho settlement allocator guidance

This non-certified guide covers Idaho settlement allocator planning notes. It explains how to read the calculator's outputs and which inputs usually move the result. It does not certify Idaho law, a settlement value, or a market estimate.

Quick takeaways

  • Allocation focus: Use the calculator to compare bucket splits and scenario assumptions, not to prove a legal value.
  • Inputs that move output: Total amount, bucket labels, and percentages usually change the result most.

What each output means

Use the output to compare one scenario against another, not to prove that any particular value is legally required.

  • A larger bucket share means that assumption sent more of the settlement into that category.
  • Timing changes only matter if your workflow uses them as an input to allocation.
  • If you change the bucket structure, compare the before/after results rather than reading the number in isolation.

What changes the result most

  • The total settlement amount.
  • The bucket labels you choose for the scenario.
  • Any percentage or split assumptions you enter.
  • The timing inputs your workflow uses for comparison.

Not certified by this page

  • This page does not certify Idaho law or a settlement value.

Use the calculator

DocketMath's settlement allocator can compare bucket splits, timing assumptions, and allocation scenarios once you identify the inputs you want to model. Use this page as non-certified planning context, not as a legal authority.

Open the Settlement Allocator calculator