AT&T has agreed to a $177 million nationwide class-action settlement related to two 2024 data incidents.
The first involved a dataset containing customer identities and, for many, Social Security numbers; the second concerned call/text metadata stored with a third-party service.
If you were a current or former AT&T customer whose information was included in either incident, you may be part of the settlement class and eligible for cash benefits.
Why People Are Saying “Up To $7,500”
The settlement has two separate claim tracks—one for each incident. Class members impacted by both may submit two claims (one per incident):
- Incident A (data set with SSNs): Up to $5,000 for documented out-of-pocket losses fairly traceable to the incident. If you don’t have documents, you can still seek a tiered, pro-rated cash payment, with higher tiers if your SSN was exposed.
- Incident B (call/text metadata): Up to $2,500 for documented losses tied to this incident, or a tiered, pro-rated alternative payment for eligible account owners.
Add the two maximums ($5,000 + $2,500) and you get the headline “up to $7,500” for people who can substantiate losses across both incidents.
Who Is Eligible?
You’re likely eligible if you are a current or former AT&T wireless customer (including line users on a family account) whose data appeared in the March 2024 dataset and/or whose call/text metadata was accessed in the 2022–2023 period via a third-party system.
Tens of millions of customers—current and former—were potentially affected, which means millions could be eligible to file.
Key Deadlines & What to Expect
- Claim filing deadline: December 18, 2025
- Opt-out / objection deadline: November 17, 2025
- Final approval hearing: January 15, 2026 (Central Time)
Payments are issued after final court approval and the resolution of any appeals. If claims exceed available funds, no-document cash payments are typically pro-rated.
What Counts as a “Documented Loss”?
To pursue the higher caps, submit dated proof that reasonably ties your expense to the incident:
- Fraud/identity-theft reports or police reports
- Bank/merchant letters showing unauthorized activity and resolution steps
- Receipts for credit monitoring, card replacement fees, phone number port-out fixes, or identity-restoration services
- Affidavits and supporting records showing time and money spent addressing misuse
Important: If you’re claiming for both incidents, provide separate documentation for each. The same receipt cannot be used twice.
How to File a Strong Claim (Step-By-Step)
- Identify your eligibility: Confirm whether you were affected by Incident A, Incident B, or both (overlap members can file two claims).
- Choose your path:
- If you have proof of out-of-pocket losses, claim documented reimbursement (up to $5,000 for A, $2,500 for B).
- If you lack documents, select the tiered cash option(s).
- Gather and label evidence: Match each receipt or letter to the specific incident it addresses.
- Submit the claim(s) by Dec 18, 2025: Keep digital copies of everything you upload.
- Monitor updates: Payments are processed after the court’s final approval and administrative review.
Quick Reference
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Settlement Fund | $177 million total |
| Max Per Person | Up to $7,500 (A: up to $5,000 + B: up to $2,500) |
| No-Docs Option | Tiered, pro-rated cash from each incident fund (higher tier if SSN was exposed in A) |
| Who Qualifies | Current/former AT&T customers impacted by the 2024 incidents |
| Claim Deadline | December 18, 2025 |
| Opt-Out / Object | November 17, 2025 |
| Final Approval Hearing | January 15, 2026 |
| Administrator | Kroll Settlement Administration |
If you’re an AT&T customer—past or present—this settlement could mean real money for the time and costs you spent dealing with the 2024 incidents.
With documented losses, you can seek up to $5,000 (Incident A) and up to $2,500 (Incident B).
If you don’t have receipts, you may still receive a tiered cash payment. The deadlines are strict, so organize your documentation now, file on time, and keep copies to maximize your potential payout.
FAQs
Can I file two claims if I was affected by both incidents?
Yes. Overlap class members may submit two claims—one for each incident. Use different documentation for each claim.
What if I don’t have receipts or bank letters?
You can choose the no-document tiered cash option. The exact amount is pro-rated and may be higher if your SSN was exposed in Incident A.
When will I get paid?
Payments are issued after the court grants final approval and any appeals conclude. Expect disbursement following administrative processing after January 15, 2026.






