25 Class Action Settlements You Can Claim in June 2026

By All About Lawyer Editorial Team | Published: June 1, 2026 | Reading Time: ~25 minutes

Quick Facts

  • This article covers 25 verified class action settlements with active or upcoming claim windows in June 2026.
  • Deadlines vary — some close as early as June 8, 2026, so read each entry carefully.
  • Consumer issues covered include data breaches, false advertising, product defects, antitrust violations, privacy violations, securities fraud, price-fixing, and worker discrimination.
  • Filing a claim is free. You do not need an attorney.
  • Most claims take 5–15 minutes to complete online.
  • You must submit a claim form to receive payment unless the settlement is marked automatic.
  • Always verify current deadlines on each official settlement website before filing.

What Is a Class Action Settlement?

A class action settlement is a legal agreement that resolves a lawsuit filed on behalf of a large group of consumers or investors who experienced the same harm from a company. When a company settles, it creates a fund to pay eligible people — without any admission of wrongdoing. You do not need to have filed the original lawsuit to receive money. If you fall within the defined class period and meet the eligibility requirements, you can file a claim for your share.

This article covers 25 settlements with open or ongoing claim windows in June 2026. Filing is free and typically takes 5–15 minutes per settlement. Settlements are listed in order of claim deadline, earliest first.

How to File a Class Action Claim

You do not need a lawyer and the process costs nothing. First, confirm you meet each settlement’s eligibility criteria. Next, gather any required documentation — this may include receipts, account numbers, bank statements, breach notification letters, or brokerage statements. Then visit the official settlement website listed for each entry and complete the online claim form before the deadline. Mailed claims must generally be postmarked by the deadline date. Keep a copy of your submission confirmation for your records.

25 Open Class Action Settlements — June 2026

Listed in order of claim deadline, earliest first.

1. GSK Boostrix Whooping Cough Vaccine False Advertising Settlement — New York Residents

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) ran misleading advertising campaigns designed to exaggerate the risk of whooping cough (pertussis) in order to drive consumer demand for its Boostrix vaccine, in violation of New York consumer protection laws.

Who may be eligible: New York residents who received the Boostrix vaccine based on or influenced by GSK’s advertising.

Settlement amount: Not publicly disclosed

Estimated payment:

  • $10 flat cash payment (no proof required)
  • $50 flat cash payment (with proof of vaccination)

Claim deadline: June 8, 2026

What you need: For the $10 payment: no proof required. For the $50 payment: vaccination record, doctor’s visit documentation, or pharmacy receipt confirming Boostrix vaccination.

Official settlement website: bigbadcoughsettlement.com

Key note: This settlement is restricted to New York residents only. If you received a Boostrix vaccination in New York and still have a vaccination record or pharmacy receipt, filing takes under 10 minutes and could earn you $50.

2. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Age Discrimination Settlement — Florida Applicants

What the lawsuit alleged: The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) alleged that Enterprise Leasing Company of Florida engaged in age discrimination in its Management Trainee hiring process in Florida between 2019 and 2023, systematically denying positions to applicants age 40 and over in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA).

Who may be eligible: Applicants age 40 or older who applied for a Management Trainee position with Enterprise in Florida between 2019 and 2023 and were denied the position.

Settlement amount: $1.8 million

Estimated payment: Pro-rata share of the net settlement fund based on the number of valid claimants

Claim deadline: June 8, 2026

What you need: Completion of a Claimant Questionnaire confirming your age, application dates, and location. Documentation of your application or denial may be helpful but is not required.

Official settlement website: https://eeoc-enterprisesettlement.com/

Key note: This is an EEOC-administered settlement, not a standard consumer class action. If you are 40 or older and applied for a Management Trainee role with Enterprise in Florida during the class period and were turned down, submit your Claimant Questionnaire before June 8 — you likely qualify.

3. ASP Aesthetics Unwanted Marketing Texts Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that ASP Aesthetics LP continued to send marketing text messages to consumers after they had explicitly opted out and requested that the messages stop, in violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA).

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who received unwanted text messages from ASP Aesthetics after requesting to opt out.

Settlement amount: Not publicly disclosed

Estimated payment: Up to $55 per unwanted text received, with a maximum of $550 per person

Claim deadline: June 11, 2026

What you need: Your name, contact information, and the phone number that received the unwanted texts. Documentation of the opt-out request and subsequent messages, if available, may increase your claim value.

Official settlement website: https://asptcpasettlement.com/

Key note: At up to $55 per text, this settlement offers one of the highest per-message recoveries of any TCPA case open in June 2026. If you received multiple texts after opting out, the cap of $550 per person means up to 10 qualifying messages at full value.

4. Contaminated Blood Pressure Medications Settlement — Valsartan, Irbesartan & Losartan ($15.3M Combined)

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that three pharmaceutical manufacturers — Teva, Granules, and Heritage — manufactured and distributed blood pressure medications contaminated with nitrosamines, which are probable human carcinogens. The contamination affected Valsartan (NDMA contamination), Irbesartan, and Losartan.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who paid out of pocket for:

  • Hetero Valsartan between May and July 2018
  • Aurobindo Irbesartan between January 2016 and the present
  • Specific lots of Vivimed Losartan (verify eligible lot numbers at the settlement website)

Settlement amount: $5.55 million (Teva, Granules, Heritage combined — $15.3 million when including related settlements)

Estimated payment: Varies based on out-of-pocket costs and prescription volume. No proof of purchase required for a basic claim.

Claim deadline: July 10, 2026 — but file in June to stay ahead of the deadline

What you need: For a basic no-proof claim: confirm you purchased qualifying medications during the eligible period. For a higher documented claim: pharmacy receipts, insurance explanation of benefits, or prescription records.

Official settlement website: https://inremetforminsettlement.com/home/

Key note: If your doctor prescribed any of these blood pressure medications during the contamination window, you likely qualify for at minimum a pro-rata payment without documentation. Check your old pharmacy records or prescription history through your insurance portal.

Related article: Bitcoin Depot ATM Impersonation Scam Lawsuit, Were You Tricked Into Depositing Cash? — Lacey et al. v. Bitcoin Depot Inc., et al., No. 1:26-cv-00288-DKG

25 Class Action Settlements You Can Claim in June 2026

5. Trader Joe’s $7.4M Receipt Privacy Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Trader Joe’s printed more than the legally permitted number of digits of customers’ credit and debit card numbers on store receipts in violation of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA), which limits receipt printing to no more than the last five digits of any card number.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who paid by credit or debit card at any Trader Joe’s store between March 5, 2019, and July 19, 2019, and received a printed receipt.

Settlement amount: $7.4 million

Estimated payment: Approximately $102.45 per eligible person

Claim deadline: June 9, 2026

What you need: Proof of a qualifying Trader Joe’s card transaction during the class period. A bank statement or credit card statement showing a Trader Joe’s charge between March 5, 2019, and July 19, 2019, is sufficient.

Official settlement website: tj-factasettlement.com

Key note: The class period is very narrow — only about 4.5 months in 2019. Pull your bank or credit card statements from that specific window now. If you shopped at Trader Joe’s regularly and paid by card, there is a strong chance you qualify for the estimated $102.45 payout. This is one of the highest fixed per-person payments of any settlement open in June.

6. SouthState Bank $1.5M Data Breach Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that SouthState Bank failed to adequately protect its customers’ personal and financial information, resulting in a 2024 data breach that exposed sensitive account data and personal identifiers.

Who may be eligible: Current and former SouthState Bank customers whose personal information was compromised in the 2024 data breach and who received a breach notification from SouthState Bank.

Settlement amount: $1.5 million

Estimated payment:

  • Pro-rata flat cash payment (no documentation required)
  • Up to $3,500 for documented out-of-pocket losses related to the breach

Claim deadline: June 15, 2026

What you need: Breach notification letter from SouthState Bank. For documented loss claims: bank statements, credit card statements, invoices, or receipts showing breach-related financial harm.

Official settlement website: southstatebankdatasettlement.com

Key note: SouthState Bank operates under multiple brand names and serves customers across the Southeast. If you received a breach notification and have not yet filed, June 15 is a firm deadline. Even without documented losses, a flat pro-rata payment is available.

7. Complete Payroll Solutions $2.6M Data Breach Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Complete Payroll Solutions (CPS) failed to implement reasonable cybersecurity safeguards to protect sensitive employee data, resulting in a 2024 data breach that exposed employees’ names, Social Security numbers, financial account information, and other personally identifiable information.

Who may be eligible: Current and former employees whose payroll data was processed by Complete Payroll Solutions and who received a breach notification letter from CPS.

Settlement amount: $2.6 million

Estimated payment:

  • Approximately $100 flat cash payment (no proof required)
  • Up to $5,000 for documented out-of-pocket losses
  • Three years of free credit monitoring services

Claim deadline: June 18, 2026

What you need: Breach notification letter from Complete Payroll Solutions. For documented losses: bank statements, credit card statements, or invoices showing breach-related costs.

Official settlement website: CPSSettlement.com

Key note: The no-proof $100 payment is available to every notified class member. The three-year credit monitoring is a tangible ongoing benefit — comparable commercial services run $100–$200 per year. If you received a CPS breach notice, this is worth 15 minutes of your time before June 18.

8. Avis Rent A Car Data Breach Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Avis Budget Group failed to adequately protect customer data in a data breach that occurred between August 3 and 6, 2024, exposing customers’ names, addresses, driver’s license numbers, dates of birth, and in some cases financial account information.

Who may be eligible: U.S. residents whose personal information was compromised in the Avis Rent A Car data breach between August 3 and 6, 2024, and who received a data breach notification from Avis.

Settlement amount: Not publicly disclosed

Estimated payment:

  • Pro-rata flat cash payment (no documentation required)
  • Up to $5,000 for documented, unreimbursed out-of-pocket losses resulting from the breach, covering losses occurring between August 3, 2024, and June 21, 2026

Claim deadline: June 21, 2026 | Final approval hearing: July 28, 2026

What you need: Breach notification from Avis. For documented loss claims: bank statements, credit card statements, identity theft documentation, credit monitoring receipts, or invoices showing breach-related financial harm.

Official settlement website: Verify at the official settlement administrator website. Phone: (888) 818-4234 | Mail: postmark claims by June 21, 2026

Key note: If you rented from Avis in summer 2024 and received a breach notification — even if you did not experience direct financial loss — the flat pro-rata payment is available with no documentation. File before June 21.

9. Krispy Kreme $1.6M Data Breach Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Krispy Kreme failed to implement adequate cybersecurity protections, resulting in a data breach on November 29, 2024, that compromised customer personal information including names, contact details, and payment data.

Who may be eligible: U.S. residents whose personal information was exposed in the Krispy Kreme November 2024 data breach and who received a breach notification.

Settlement amount: $1.6 million

Estimated payment:

  • Approximately $75 flat cash payment (no proof required)
  • Up to $3,500 for documented out-of-pocket losses
  • One year of free credit monitoring

Claim deadline: June 22, 2026

What you need: Breach notification from Krispy Kreme. For documented losses: bank statements, credit card statements, invoices, or receipts showing breach-related losses.

Official settlement website: https://krispykremedatasettlement.com/. Phone: (877) 239-1879

Key note: The $75 no-documentation payment is among the higher flat-rate amounts for a breach of this fund size. If you are a Krispy Kreme rewards member or online customer who received a breach notification in late 2024 or early 2025, file by June 22.

10. Lakeview Loan Servicing $26M Data Breach Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Lakeview Loan Servicing and its affiliated mortgage servicers failed to protect the personal and financial information of mortgage customers, resulting in a data breach that exposed sensitive data including Social Security numbers, financial account details, and mortgage information.

Who may be eligible: Individuals whose personal information was compromised in the Lakeview Loan Servicing data breach and who received a data breach notification. California residents may be eligible for additional CCPA-based compensation.

Settlement amount: $26 million

Estimated payment:

  • Pro-rata share of the settlement fund; up to $5,000 for documented losses
  • California residents may receive an additional CCPA payment

Claim deadline: June 22, 2026

What you need: Breach notification from Lakeview Loan Servicing (which services mortgages under multiple brand names). For documented loss claims: financial records showing breach-related harm.

Official settlement website: https://lakeviewdatabreachsettlement.com/

Key note: Lakeview services mortgages under several brand names — check your mortgage servicer against the official list. With a $26 million fund, this is one of the larger mortgage-sector breach settlements of 2026. California residents should specifically flag that they reside in California when filing to trigger the CCPA payment tier.

11. Varsity Brands $82.5M Cheerleading Antitrust Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Varsity Brands LLC and the U.S. All Star Federation (USASF) maintained a monopoly over competitive cheerleading events, camps, and apparel through anticompetitive acquisitions of rivals and exclusive dealing arrangements, causing families to overpay for All Star cheer participation.

Who may be eligible: Families who paid an All Star gym or school to participate in a Varsity cheer competition or camp, or who purchased required Varsity cheer clothing, during the applicable class period. Verify specific dates and eligibility at the official settlement website.

Settlement amount: $82.5 million

Estimated payment: Pro-rata cash payment based on total valid claims filed. Varies by the amount paid for Varsity competitions, camps, or apparel.

Claim deadline: June 10, 2026 (extended deadline — verify at official settlement website)

What you need: Information about your child’s All Star gym, the competitions and camps attended, and approximate tuition or competition fees paid. Documentation of fees is helpful but not required for a basic claim.

Official settlement website: CheerAntitrustSettlement.com

Key note: With an $82.5 million fund, this is one of the largest antitrust settlements affecting youth sports families in U.S. history. If your child participated in competitive All Star cheer at any level — local, regional, or national — and you paid Varsity-affiliated fees, this settlement may apply to you.

12. European Wax Center $5M Website Tracking Privacy Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that European Wax Center used tracking pixels, cookies, and third-party tools on its website (waxcenter.com) without adequate disclosure, transmitting visitors’ browsing data and personal information to advertising platforms in violation of privacy laws.

Who may be eligible: U.S. residents who visited the waxcenter.com website between June 30, 2023, and April 2, 2026.

Settlement amount: Up to $5 million

Estimated payment: Up to $10 per eligible person (no proof required)

Claim deadline: June 30, 2026

What you need: No proof required. Confirm you visited waxcenter.com during the class period and complete the online claim form.

Official settlement website: Verify at the official settlement administrator website (search “European Wax Center website privacy settlement 2026”)

Key note: Website privacy settlements like this one are among the easiest to file — no purchase, appointment, or documentation is required. If you visited the European Wax Center website to book appointments, check services, or browse products during the three-year class period, you likely qualify. The $10 payment takes about 5 minutes to claim.

13. Tyson Foods & Cargill $87.5M Beef Price-Fixing Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that major beef producers including Tyson Foods and Cargill conspired to reduce the supply of beef cattle to artificially inflate beef prices paid by grocery consumers between 2015 and 2022.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who purchased fresh or frozen beef made from chuck, loin, rib, or round primal cuts at a grocery store or supermarket between August 1, 2014, and December 31, 2019, in the following states: Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia, and Washington D.C.

Excluded products: USDA Prime beef, 100% grass-fed, organic, Wagyu, antibiotic-free, kosher, halal, certified humane, ground beef, seasoned, marinated, breaded, or cooked beef.

Settlement amount: $87.5 million combined

Estimated payment: Varies based on state and self-reported purchase history. No documentation required for a basic claim.

Claim deadline: June 30, 2026

What you need: State of residence, confirmation that you purchased qualifying beef at retail grocery stores during the class period. No receipts required.

Official settlement website: overchargedforbeef.com

Key note: If you purchased grocery store beef in any of the listed states between 2014 and 2019, you almost certainly qualify. This is one of the most broadly accessible food price-fixing settlements in years. No receipt is required — just confirm your state and general purchasing history.

14. Amazon Prime $2.5B FTC Settlement — Consumer Refunds

What the lawsuit alleged: The Federal Trade Commission alleged that Amazon enrolled tens of millions of customers in Amazon Prime subscriptions without their clear knowledge or consent through confusing enrollment screens, and then made it deliberately difficult for customers to cancel their subscriptions.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who enrolled in Amazon Prime through specific “challenged” enrollment flows — including checkout, Prime decision pages, Prime Video, or single-page checkout — between June 23, 2019, and June 23, 2025. Also eligible: people who attempted to cancel Prime during the same window but did not complete the process, or who accidentally accepted a retention offer.

Settlement amount: $2.5 billion total ($1.5 billion for consumer refunds; $1 billion civil penalty to the government)

Estimated payment: Approximately $51 per eligible consumer. Some accounts received automatic refunds in November–December 2025. Remaining eligible consumers are being sent claim notices.

Claim deadline: June 27, 2026 (verify at official settlement website)

What you need: If Amazon sent you a settlement notice, follow the instructions in that notice. Check your inbox and spam folder for emails from Amazon or the settlement administrator. Contact: [email protected] | Phone: (888) 999-8094

Official settlement website: SubscriptionMembershipSettlement.com | FTC information: ftc.gov/Amazon

Key note: Amazon is using its own enrollment records to identify eligible customers and send notices directly. If you were an Amazon Prime member between 2019 and 2025 and ever struggled to cancel, check your email. This is one of the largest consumer FTC settlements in U.S. history.

15. Robinhood $2M Trade Execution Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Robinhood Financial failed to provide best execution on equity trades and did not adequately disclose its payment-for-order-flow arrangements with market makers, which may have resulted in customers receiving less favorable trade prices than they were entitled to.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who placed equity trades on the Robinhood platform between September 2016 and September 2018.

Settlement amount: $2 million

Estimated payment: Approximately $17 per eligible person (no proof required)

Claim deadline: July 13, 2026 — file in June to stay ahead

What you need: Confirmation that you had a Robinhood account and placed equity trades during the class period. No brokerage statements required for a basic claim.

Official settlement website: robinhoodorderflowsettlement.com

Key note: If you were an early Robinhood user between 2016 and 2018, the $17 no-documentation payment takes about 5 minutes to claim. Although the settlement predates Robinhood’s peak popularity, many early adopters qualify who may not realize this settlement exists.

16. Hustler Hollywood $23 Receipt Privacy Settlement (FACTA)

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Hustler Hollywood retail stores printed more than the legally permitted number of credit or debit card digits on customer receipts in violation of FACTA, which limits receipt printing to no more than the last five digits of any payment card number.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who made a qualifying credit or debit card purchase at a Hustler Hollywood retail store during the class period. Verify exact dates at the official settlement website.

Settlement amount: Not publicly disclosed

Estimated payment: Approximately $23 per eligible person

Claim deadline: July 27, 2026 — file in June to ensure timely submission

What you need: Proof of a qualifying purchase at a Hustler Hollywood retail location during the class period. A bank statement or credit card statement showing the transaction is sufficient.

Official settlement website: www.HHFACTASettlement.com

Key note: FACTA receipt settlements like this one require a specific in-store purchase — online orders do not typically qualify. Check your card statements against the class period dates before filing.

17. Tom’s of Maine Toothpaste $2.9M False Advertising Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Colgate-Palmolive, the parent company of Tom’s of Maine, falsely advertised its toothpaste products as “natural,” misrepresenting the nature of certain ingredients to consumers who paid a premium for what they believed was a natural personal care product.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who purchased Tom’s of Maine toothpaste products between November 2020 and March 2026.

Settlement amount: $2.9 million

Estimated payment: Approximately $20 per eligible person (no proof of purchase required)

Claim deadline: July 6, 2026 — file in June to stay ahead

What you need: No receipt or proof of purchase required. Confirm you purchased qualifying Tom’s of Maine toothpaste during the class period and complete the claim form.

Official settlement website: toothpastesettlement.com

Key note: Tom’s of Maine is sold at virtually every major grocery chain, pharmacy, and natural food store in the U.S. The class period spans over five years. If you used Tom’s of Maine toothpaste at any point between late 2020 and early 2026, this is one of the easiest $20 claims to file — no receipt needed.

18. Copa América Final Match $14M Settlement — Fans Denied Entry

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Hard Rock Stadium, CONMEBOL, CONCACAF, and BEST Crowd Management acted negligently in managing crowd control at the July 14, 2024 Copa América Final between Argentina and Colombia in Miami, Florida. Their failure to implement adequate security and crowd-management measures resulted in chaos at the gates: unticketed fans forced their way in, valid ticketholders were denied entry or denied access to their seats, and many attendees left early due to safety concerns.

Who may be eligible:

  • Denied Entry Class: Valid ticket holders who were prevented from entering Hard Rock Stadium on July 14, 2024
  • Denied Full Access Class: Valid ticket holders who were admitted to the stadium but were denied full access to facilities or their purchased seats

Settlement amount: $14 million

Estimated payment:

  • Up to $2,000 per ticket for the Denied Entry Class (with proof)
  • Up to $100 per ticket for the Denied Full Access Class (with proof)

Claim deadline: August 11, 2026 — begin gathering documentation in June

What you need: For all claims: ticket section, seat number, and entry gate. For Denied Entry: a date- and time-stamped photo or video taken outside the stadium during the match showing your face, OR a copy of a valid government-issued photo ID. Proof of ticket purchase (receipt, invoice, payment confirmation) is required.

Official settlement website: finalmatchsettlement.com | Mail: Copa America Settlement, c/o Settlement Administrator, 1650 Arch St., Suite 2210, Philadelphia, PA 19103 | Case: Nobel, et al. v. South Florida Stadium LLC, et al., U.S. District Court, S.D. Florida

Key note: Start gathering your proof now — ticket confirmations, photos, and timestamped social media posts from outside the stadium during the match are all valuable documentation. With $2,000 per denied entry ticket available, this is one of the highest individual payouts of any settlement open this summer.

19. Circle K $50 Data Breach Settlement — May 2024 Cyberattack

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Circle K failed to implement adequate cybersecurity measures to protect customer and employee data, resulting in a May 2024 cyberattack that exposed names and Social Security numbers of affected individuals.

Who may be eligible: U.S. residents who received a breach notification from Circle K related to the May 2024 cyberattack.

Settlement amount: Up to $45,000 total documented loss claims pool; $50 alternative flat payment available

Estimated payment:

  • $50 alternative flat cash payment (for those not claiming documented losses)
  • Up to $2,000 for documented out-of-pocket losses (capped across all claimants)

Claim deadline: September 3, 2026 — but begin filing in June to avoid the last-minute rush

What you need: Breach notification from Circle K. For documented losses: bank statements, credit card statements, or identity theft documentation.

Official settlement website: https://gasexpressdatasettlement.com/

Key note: With Social Security numbers exposed, the risk of identity theft is ongoing. Filing this month means you can also take advantage of any complementary credit monitoring benefits while the threat window is active. The $50 alternative payment requires no documentation and is available to all notified class members.

20. Cosequin Joint Supplements $60+ Settlement — California Residents

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Nutramax Laboratories, the manufacturer of Cosequin joint health supplements, misled California consumers about the efficacy of its products by claiming they support joint health despite scientific evidence that did not adequately support those specific marketing claims.

Who may be eligible: California residents who purchased Cosequin joint supplement products between 2018 and 2026.

Settlement amount: Not publicly disclosed

Estimated payment: $60 or more per eligible claimant (no proof of purchase required)

Claim deadline: July 21, 2026 — file in June

What you need: No receipt required. Confirm that you purchased Cosequin products in California during the class period and complete the claim form.

Official settlement website: cosequincasettlement.com

Key note: Cosequin products are sold at Costco, Target, Walgreens, CVS, and pet supply retailers nationwide. If you are a California resident who purchased Cosequin for yourself or a pet during the eight-year class period, filing takes under 10 minutes with no proof required.

21. Fidelity Investments $2.5M Data Breach Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Fidelity Investments failed to adequately protect customers’ financial account information, resulting in a data breach between August 17 and 19, 2024, that compromised financial account numbers, routing numbers, and other sensitive personal information.

Who may be eligible: Individuals who received a data breach notification from Fidelity Investments indicating that their financial account number and routing number were compromised in the August 2024 breach.

Settlement amount: $2.5 million

Estimated payment:

  • $100 pro-rata cash payment (no documentation required)
  • Up to $5,000 for documented out-of-pocket losses
  • $50 additional payment for California residents under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)

Claim deadline: July 27, 2026 — file in June to stay ahead | Final approval hearing: July 9, 2026

What you need: Breach notification from Fidelity Investments. For documented losses: receipts, bank or credit card statements, or other documentation showing financial harm — self-prepared documents are not accepted.

Official settlement website: https://fidelitydatasettlement.com/

Key note: California residents should specifically note their state residency when filing to trigger the $50 CCPA add-on, which brings the no-documentation payout to $150 for CA residents. The final approval hearing is July 9 — filing before then ensures your claim is processed in the initial wave.

22. Mitsubishi Outlander Hood Defect Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that certain Mitsubishi Outlander vehicles were equipped with defective hood latches or hood mechanisms that could fail unexpectedly while driving, creating a safety hazard for drivers and passengers.

Who may be eligible: U.S. owners and lessees of qualifying Mitsubishi Outlander model years with the alleged hood defect. Verify eligible models and years at the official settlement website.

Settlement amount: Not publicly disclosed

Estimated payment: Up to $4,595 in reimbursements for:

  • Hood repair or replacement costs
  • Rental car expenses during repair
  • Towing costs related to the defect

Claim deadline: July 30, 2026 — gather vehicle documentation in June

What you need: Vehicle VIN, proof of ownership or lease, and documentation of any repair, towing, or rental expenses related to the hood defect (invoices, dealer estimates, receipts).

Official settlement website: https://hoodsettlement.com/

Key note: Auto defect settlements typically require proof of the specific repair, but if you experienced hood issues and paid out of pocket, this settlement offers meaningful reimbursement. Start pulling your vehicle service records this month — dealership service records can be requested by VIN even if you no longer have your personal copies.

23. Cardiovascular Consultants $3.85M Data Breach Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Cardiovascular Consultants Ltd. (CVC) failed to implement adequate cybersecurity safeguards to protect patient records, resulting in a cyberattack that compromised the personal and protected health information of current and former patients.

Who may be eligible: Current and former patients of Cardiovascular Consultants Ltd. whose personal health information and personally identifiable information were compromised in the data breach and who received a breach notification.

Settlement amount: $3.85 million

Estimated payment:

  • Up to $5,000 for documented out-of-pocket losses
  • Pro-rata flat cash payment for non-documented claims
  • Free credit monitoring services

Claim deadline: July 1, 2026 — file in June to be ahead of the deadline

What you need: Breach notification from Cardiovascular Consultants Ltd. For documented losses: medical bills, identity theft documentation, bank statements, or invoices showing breach-related financial harm.

Official settlement website: cvcdatasettlement.com

Key note: Medical record breaches carry the highest long-term identity theft risk because health data cannot be “changed” the way a password can. If you were a CVC patient and received a breach notice, prioritizing this claim in June — even for the free credit monitoring alone — is worthwhile.

24. Shimano Hollowtech II Crankset Defect Settlement

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Shimano, a major manufacturer of bicycle components, sold Hollowtech II road cranksets (Dura-Ace and Ultegra models manufactured before 2019) with a defect that could cause the crank arm to separate from the spindle while riding, creating serious injury risks for cyclists.

Who may be eligible: U.S. consumers who purchased, received, or owned a bicycle equipped with a qualifying Shimano Hollowtech II Dura-Ace or Ultegra crankset manufactured before 2019. Approximately 760,000 cranksets are subject to this recall and settlement.

Settlement amount: Not publicly disclosed

Estimated payment:

  • Extended warranty on the crankset
  • Enhanced inspection services
  • Reimbursement of replacement costs for qualifying cranksets that have already been replaced

Claim deadline: August 4, 2026 — begin gathering documentation in June

What you need: Proof of purchase or ownership of a qualifying bicycle or crankset. Serial number, purchase receipt, or bike shop invoice if available. Replacement cost documentation if you have already replaced the crankset.

Official settlement website: shimanocranksetsettlement.com

Key note: Road cyclists who ride Shimano Dura-Ace or Ultegra groupsets should check whether their cranksets fall within the affected manufacturing range. Even if you have not experienced a failure, the extended warranty and enhanced inspection benefits are available at no cost to qualifying owners.

25. Comcast Xfinity $117.5M Data Breach Settlement (Deadline August 14 — File in June)

What the lawsuit alleged: Plaintiffs alleged that Comcast failed to implement adequate cybersecurity protections for approximately 31.6 million Xfinity customers, allowing a data breach between October 16 and 19, 2023, by exploiting the “CitrixBleed” vulnerability. The breach exposed usernames, hashed passwords, names, contact information, dates of birth, and in some cases partial Social Security numbers.

Who may be eligible: U.S. residents who received a data breach notification from Comcast or Xfinity about the October 2023 breach.

Settlement amount: $117.5 million

Estimated payment:

  • Approximately $50 flat cash payment (no documentation required)
  • Up to $10,000 for documented out-of-pocket losses related to identity theft
  • Three years of identity theft protection and credit monitoring

Claim deadline: August 14, 2026 — but file in June to avoid the last-minute rush | Final approval hearing: July 7, 2026 | Exclusion/objection deadline: June 1, 2026

What you need: Settlement notice ID from the letter or email Comcast sent. For documented loss claims over $100: receipts, bank statements, invoices, or professional service bills showing breach-related losses.

Official settlement website: comcastbreachsettlement.com

Key note: With 31.6 million potential class members, this is the largest data breach settlement by number of affected consumers currently accepting claims in the United States. If you received a Comcast breach notification in late 2023 or early 2024, the $50 no-documentation payment is available to every eligible person. Filing in June gives you a full two months before the August deadline — do not wait until the last week.

5 Tips to Maximize Your Settlement Claims This June

1. Search your email for settlement notices right now. Many administrators send notices with unique IDs and confirmation codes required to file online. Search your inbox for company names + “settlement,” “data breach,” or “class action.” Check your spam folder — settlement notices frequently end up there.

2. No receipt? You can still file most claims. The majority of consumer product and data breach settlements allow “no proof” claims at a lower payout tier. As examples this month: the Trader Joe’s FACTA settlement needs only a card statement, the Tom’s of Maine settlement needs no receipt at all, and the beef price-fixing settlement requires only self-attestation.

3. Never pay anyone to file your claim. Filing is always free directly on official settlement websites. Avoid third-party services that charge filing fees or a percentage of your payout. If a site asks you for payment to file, leave immediately.

4. File early, not at the last minute. Some settlement funds pay out proportionally — the fewer valid claims filed, the more each person receives. Filing early also ensures you are not caught off-guard by technical issues on the claim portal in the final days before a deadline.

5. Set a calendar reminder for every deadline in this article. Missing a deadline means forfeiting your payment permanently. Courts almost never reopen claim periods after the deadline passes. Take 5 minutes right now to add the critical June deadlines to your calendar.

What to Know Before You File in June 2026

File only for settlements where you genuinely qualify. Every claim form is submitted under penalty of perjury. Providing false or inaccurate information can result in claim denial and may carry legal consequences. Fraudulent claims also reduce the funds available to legitimately eligible class members.

After the claim deadline passes, the settlement administrator reviews all submissions. Courts must grant final approval before payments go out — this typically takes 3–6 months after the claim deadline. Watch for a notice by mail or email once your payment is approved, and check your spam folder regularly.

Always verify eligibility and deadlines on the official settlement website before filing. Settlement administrators are the only authoritative source for current claim status, deadlines, and payment details.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a lawyer to file a claim?

No. Class action settlements are designed for consumers to file directly at no cost. You should never pay anyone to file a standard settlement claim on your behalf. Filing is always free.

Can I file multiple settlement claims at the same time?

Yes, as long as you genuinely qualify for each one. Each claim is independent. Many consumers in June 2026 will qualify for several settlements simultaneously — for example, the beef price-fixing settlement, the Tom’s of Maine settlement, and the European Wax Center settlement may all apply to a single household.

What if I do not have proof of purchase?

Many settlements offer a reduced payment option without proof. For example, the Tom’s of Maine settlement pays approximately $20 with no receipt, and the beef price-fixing settlement requires only self-attestation. Check each settlement’s specific terms before filing.

When will I receive my payment?

Most payments arrive 3–6 months after the claim deadline, but only after the court grants final approval. If any party appeals the settlement, the timeline can extend further. Check the settlement website for payment status updates.

Are settlement payments taxable?

It depends on the type of settlement. Payments compensating for physical injury are generally not taxable. Payments for data breaches, false advertising, price overcharges, or antitrust violations are often treated as taxable income. Consult a tax professional for significant payment amounts.

What happens if I miss the deadline?

In nearly all cases, missing the deadline means no payment. Courts rarely reopen claim periods. Set calendar reminders now for each settlement deadline that applies to you.

How do I verify a settlement is legitimate?

Always file directly on the official settlement administrator website listed in each entry. Legitimate settlements never charge filing fees and will never ask for your full Social Security number before you complete a formal claim form. When in doubt, search the case name in the federal PACER docket system or contact the administrator directly.

What is a pro-rata payment?

Pro-rata means your payment depends on how many total valid claims are filed. If fewer people file, each person receives more. If many people file, each person receives less. This is common in false-advertising and antitrust settlements where the total fund size is fixed.

Important: Settlements Carrying Over from May 2026

Several settlements featured in our May 2026 article remain open into June and beyond. These include the Comcast Xfinity data breach settlement (August 14), the LastPass data breach settlement (July 2), the Lakeview Loan Servicing settlement (June 22), the Hyundai & Kia airbag control unit settlement (August 4), and the Tinder age discrimination settlement (August 18). If you qualified under those entries and have not yet filed, June is your window.

Sources & References

Readers can verify current settlement status, official claim forms, and deadline updates at the following primary sources:

  • Trader Joe’s FACTA settlement: tj-factasettlement.com
  • Beef price-fixing settlement: overchargedforbeef.com
  • Amazon Prime settlement: SubscriptionMembershipSettlement.com | ftc.gov/Amazon
  • Copa América Final settlement: finalmatchsettlement.com
  • Avis data breach settlement: topclassactions.com (search “Avis data breach settlement”)
  • Comcast Xfinity settlement: comcastbreachsettlement.com
  • Complete Payroll Solutions settlement: CPSSettlement.com
  • Cardiovascular Consultants settlement: cvcdatasettlement.com
  • SouthState Bank settlement: southstatebankdatasettlement.com
  • Krispy Kreme settlement: Phone (877) 239-1879
  • GSK Boostrix settlement: bigbadcoughsettlement.com
  • Robinhood settlement: robinhoodorderflowsettlement.com
  • Tom’s of Maine settlement: toothpastesettlement.com
  • Cosequin settlement (CA): cosequincasettlement.com
  • Shimano crankset settlement: shimanocranksetsettlement.com
  • Varsity Brands settlement: CheerAntitrustSettlement.com

Prepared by the AllAboutLawyer.com Editorial Team, fact-checked against official settlement administrator websites and publicly available court records. Last Updated: June 1, 2026.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Legal claims and outcomes depend on specific facts and applicable law. Deadlines are subject to change — always verify at the official settlement website before filing. For advice regarding a particular situation, consult a qualified attorney.

About the Author

Sarah Klein, JD, is a licensed attorney and legal content strategist with over 12 years of experience across civil, criminal, family, and regulatory law. At All About Lawyer, she covers a wide range of legal topics — from high-profile lawsuits and courtroom stories to state traffic laws and everyday legal questions — all with a focus on accuracy, clarity, and public understanding.
Her writing blends real legal insight with plain-English explanations, helping readers stay informed and legally aware.
Read more about Sarah

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