Chapter Aesthetic Studio $1.32M Text Settlement, They Kept Texting After You Said Stop Claim Your Share before June 11

ASP Aesthetics LP, the company behind the med-spa chain Chapter Aesthetic Studio, agreed to pay $1,319,450 to settle a class action lawsuit alleging it continued sending marketing texts to customers who had already opted out. A plaintiff named Tysen Hansen sued under the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act, which makes it illegal to send promotional texts after someone requests to stop receiving them. The settlement covers an estimated 4,891 people. Claims are open now with a deadline of June 11, 2026.

FieldDetail
Settlement Amount$1,319,450
Claim DeadlineJune 11, 2026
Who QualifiesU.S. residents who opted out of Chapter Aesthetic Studio texts but kept receiving them, April 4, 2021 – Feb. 10, 2026
Payout Per PersonUp to $55 per text, up to 10 texts — maximum $550
Proof RequiredNo
Settlement StatusPreliminarily approved, open for claims
AdministratorContinental DataLogix
Official Websiteasptcpasettlement.com

Where things stand: The court has preliminarily approved the settlement. The final approval hearing is scheduled for May 27, 2026 — two weeks before the claim deadline. Payments go out within 60 days after the court grants final approval.

You Said “STOP.” Chapter Aesthetic Studio Allegedly Kept Texting Anyway.

Federal law under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act is clear: once a consumer requests to stop receiving marketing texts, a company must honor that request. Continuing to send promotional messages after an opt-out is not a gray area — it’s a statutory violation that carries penalties of $500 to $1,500 per text.

Plaintiff Tysen Hansen alleged that ASP Aesthetics LP, which operates Chapter Aesthetic Studio med-spa locations, did exactly that. After receiving opt-out requests from customers, the company allegedly continued sending marketing texts promoting its services. The lawsuit, Tysen Hansen v. ASP Aesthetics LP, Case No. 2025LA001594, was filed on behalf of all consumers who experienced the same.

ASP Aesthetics denies any wrongdoing and disputes the allegations. But like many companies in TCPA cases, it chose to settle rather than face the expense and risk of protracted litigation, particularly given that each text to each person can represent an independent statutory penalty.

Did Chapter Aesthetic Studio Text You After You Opted Out? Here’s the Exact Window That Counts

This settlement is narrower than it might first appear. You must meet all of the following criteria to qualify:

  • You may qualify if you are a U.S. resident.
  • You may qualify if you asked ASP Aesthetics (doing business as Chapter Aesthetic Studio) to stop sending you text messages at any time between April 4, 2021, and February 10, 2026.
  • You may qualify if you then received one or more marketing texts from ASP Aesthetics — or its agents — on your cell phone after making that opt-out request.
  • You may qualify if those texts promoted Chapter Aesthetic Studio’s goods, products, or services.

Notably, you do not need to have been a paying customer. Anyone who received promotional texts and opted out falls within the class definition. If you received a settlement notice by mail or email, you are already identified as a class member. If you believe you qualify but didn’t receive a notice, contact Continental DataLogix at 888-542-0068 or [email protected].

$55 Per Unwanted Text — Up to $550 If They Sent You Ten or More

The payout formula here is unusually straightforward: every qualifying text you received after opting out is worth up to $55, and you can claim for up to ten texts. That means the hard ceiling per person is $550.

The actual per-text amount is pro-rata — meaning it depends on the total number of valid claims filed. If fewer people claim, each gets closer to the $55 maximum. If the full class of roughly 4,891 people files, the per-text amount settles lower. Final payouts are not known until after the claim deadline.

You claim based on the number of texts you received post-opt-out. If you got two texts after opting out, you claim two. If you got ten or more, you claim ten — that’s the cap.

The $1,319,450 fund covers attorneys’ fees of up to $435,418.50, a service award of up to $5,000 for Hansen as the class representative, administrative costs, and whatever remains goes to claimants. Payments come as paper checks mailed to the address you provide on the claim form.

Related article: $11.8M Choice Home Warranty Arizona Settlement, They Promised to Cover Your A/C and Appliances, Arizona Says It Didn’t.Get Your Money Back Before August 1

Chapter Aesthetic Studio $1.32M Text Settlement, They Kept Texting After You Said Stop Claim Your Share before June 11

Four Steps to Claim Your Share Before June 11

  1. Go to asptcpasettlement.com/claimform.aspx — this is the official online claim form managed by Continental DataLogix.
  2. Enter your claim number and PIN from the settlement notice you received. Can’t find them? Call 888-542-0068 or email [email protected] with your name and mailing address to get them.
  3. Enter your cell phone number that received the texts — this is a required field on the claim form.
  4. Select how many qualifying texts you received after opting out (up to 10), then submit and save your confirmation.

Prefer paper? Download the PDF claim form at asptcpasettlement.com/pdf/claim.pdf, fill it out, and mail it to: Hansen v. ASP Aesthetics LP, c/o Settlement Administrator, P.O. Box 16, West Point, PA 19486.

Estimated time to complete: 5 minutes.

From First Lawsuit to Checks in the Mail — The Key Dates

MilestoneDate
Class period beginsApril 4, 2021
Class period endsFebruary 10, 2026
Opt-out / exclusion deadlineMay 1, 2026
Final approval hearingMay 27, 2026
Claim filing deadlineJune 11, 2026
Expected payment dateWithin 60 days of final approval

Frequently Asked Questions

I texted “STOP” years ago. Does that still count? 

Yes, as long as your opt-out happened between April 4, 2021, and February 10, 2026, and you received at least one marketing text from Chapter Aesthetic Studio after that request, you fall within the class period. There is no minimum recency requirement — older opt-outs are just as valid as recent ones.

Do I need a lawyer to file a claim? 

No. Filing is free and takes about five minutes at asptcpasettlement.com. Class counsel already negotiated the settlement terms on behalf of all class members. You do not need separate legal representation to submit a claim.

Is this settlement legitimate? 

Yes. The case is Tysen Hansen v. ASP Aesthetics LP, Case No. 2025LA001594. The settlement administrator is Continental DataLogix, a third-party claims administration firm. The official settlement website is asptcpasettlement.com. If you received a notice by mail or email, it came directly from Continental DataLogix.

When will I receive my payment? 

Continental DataLogix will mail checks within 60 days after the court grants final approval. The final approval hearing is May 27, 2026, so payments could arrive as early as late summer 2026, assuming no appeals delay the process.

What if I missed the claim deadline? 

The deadline is June 11, 2026. If that date has passed, you typically cannot receive a payment from this settlement. Courts rarely reopen claim periods. You could technically opt out of the settlement (before May 1, 2026) and pursue an individual TCPA claim, but that is rarely cost-effective for claims of this size.

Will this settlement payment affect my taxes?

 Possibly. TCPA settlement payments are generally considered taxable income. If your payment exceeds $600, the settlement administrator may issue a 1099 form. Consult a tax professional if you are unsure how to handle the amount.

What is Chapter Aesthetic Studio, and where are its locations?

 Chapter Aesthetic Studio is a med-spa chain owned and operated by ASP Aesthetics LP. The company offers services including laser treatments, injectables, and skincare. It operates locations across the United States. The settlement covers customers nationwide, not just those in a particular state.

Sources & References

Last Updated: April 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. 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.
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