Individuals or their children who were under the age of 13 and watched children’s content on YouTube in the United States between July 1, 2013, and April 1, 2020, may be eligible to receive a cash payment from a $30 million class action settlement.
Google LLC and YouTube LLC agreed to pay $30 million to settle a class action lawsuit alleging that they unlawfully collected personal data from children under 13 without parental consent while those children watched child-directed content on YouTube.
To qualify for the settlement, class members must meet all of the following criteria:
If the individual eligible for the settlement is under 18 when the claim is filed, a parent or legal guardian must complete and sign the claim form. Each eligible child is considered a separate class member.
The total settlement fund is $30 million. After deducting settlement administration costs, attorneys’ fees, expenses, service awards, and applicable taxes, the remaining funds will be divided equally among all valid claimants on a pro rata basis.
Class members may file a claim online or by mailing a completed claim form to the settlement administrator. Each claim must be submitted by January 21, 2026.
Mailing address:
YouTube Privacy Settlement
c/o A.B. Data Ltd.
P.O. Box 173131
Milwaukee, WI 53217
A separate claim form must be submitted for each eligible child.
Claimants must provide the full name of the eligible child and the parent or guardian, along with the child’s date of birth.
Eligible claimants can choose to receive their settlement payment through either:
The $30,000,000 settlement fund will be allocated as follows:
Payments will be distributed after the court grants final approval and any appeals have been resolved.
The lawsuit alleged that Google and YouTube collected personal data from children under 13 while they watched child-directed videos on YouTube without obtaining parental consent. The plaintiffs claimed this violated federal and state privacy laws and that the companies used the data for advertising purposes.
Google denies any wrongdoing but agreed to the settlement to avoid the uncertainty and expense of continued litigation.
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