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Amazon Class Action Settlement 2026 — Current Cases & How to File

Last Updated: April 2026

Amazon has faced a wave of class action lawsuits in recent years — from deceptive Prime membership auto-renewals to data privacy violations and warehouse worker disputes. If you've shopped on Amazon, used Amazon Prime, or had your data stored with Amazon, you may be entitled to settlement money right now.

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Amazon Prime Auto-Renewal Settlements

One of the most common Amazon settlement categories involves automatic subscription renewals. Amazon Prime auto-renews annually at $139/year or monthly at $14.99/month, and multiple class action lawsuits have alleged Amazon made it unreasonably difficult to cancel and charged customers without adequate notice. Settlements have compensated Prime members who were charged for renewals they did not intend to authorize or could not cancel after reasonable attempts. If you subscribed to Amazon Prime and experienced unexpected renewal charges or difficulty canceling, you may qualify for a refund through an open settlement.

Amazon Data Privacy and Biometric Settlements

Amazon has faced class action lawsuits under various state privacy laws. In Illinois, Amazon settled biometric privacy claims under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) related to its Amazon One palm-scanning payment system. Amazon's Alexa devices generated litigation alleging that recordings of children were retained without parental consent, violating COPPA — resulting in a $25 million FTC settlement. Multiple data breaches at Amazon subsidiaries and third-party sellers exposed customer account information, producing class action claims in multiple jurisdictions. If you used Amazon One in Illinois, are a parent whose child interacted with Alexa, or had your account data exposed, check the settlement cards above.

15 No-Proof-Required Settlements Open Right Now

All claims below require zero documentation — no receipts, no uploads. Confirm eligibility and file in under 5 minutes.

1
$2M Amazon unpaid wages class action settlement
Up to $50 🚨 Deadline: Apr 30, 2026 ✅ No Proof
2
Amazon Retail - Employee Wages (Washington)
Varies 🚨 Deadline: Apr 30, 2026 ✅ No Proof
3
Amazon Retail $2 Million Wage and Hour Class Action Settlement
$2,000,000 🚨 Deadline: Apr 30, 2026 ✅ No Proof
4
Amazon Prime - FTC Case
Up to $51 📅 Deadline: Jul 27, 2026 ✅ No Proof
5
Amazon Refunds
Up to $51 ✅ No Proof
6
Refunds for Amazon Flex Drivers
Varies ✅ No Proof

Amazon Third-Party Seller and Price Manipulation Cases

Amazon has been the subject of class actions related to its reference price system — showing inflated "list prices" to make discounts appear larger — which plaintiffs alleged constituted deceptive price advertising. Other cases targeted Amazon's anti-competitive agreements with third-party sellers that prevented them from offering lower prices on competing platforms. States including California, New York, and Washington have been active venues for these consumer protection cases. In 2023, the FTC filed a major antitrust case against Amazon over its marketplace dominance, which may produce consumer settlement funds in coming years.

Amazon Flex and Warehouse Worker Settlements

Amazon's labor practices have generated significant class action litigation. Amazon Flex delivery drivers — classified as independent contractors — have brought class actions in multiple states alleging misclassification and failure to pay minimum wage, overtime, and expense reimbursements. California courts have been particularly active. Amazon warehouse workers have separately brought class actions over unpaid time spent in mandatory security screenings, meal break violations, and unsafe working conditions. If you worked for Amazon as a Flex driver or warehouse associate in the past five years, employment-related settlement opportunities may apply to you.

How to Find and File Open Amazon Settlements

Amazon settlements follow the same process as any other class action. Once a settlement receives court approval, a claims period opens — typically lasting 3–6 months. You file online through the official settlement administrator's website. For Amazon Prime and subscription settlements, you will need your Amazon account email and approximate subscription dates — available under "Account & Lists > Prime Membership." For data privacy settlements, self-certification is often sufficient. For employment settlements, your work dates and pay records strengthen your claim. Check the settlement cards above for currently open Amazon cases with payout estimates and deadlines.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Amazon has faced class action settlements covering Prime auto-renewals, Alexa COPPA violations, Amazon One biometric data (BIPA), third-party seller price manipulation, and Amazon Flex gig worker misclassification. Check the settlement cards above for currently open cases with active filing deadlines.
If you subscribed to Amazon Prime and experienced unexpected renewal charges or difficulty canceling during the class period, you may be eligible. Basic eligibility typically requires confirming your Prime membership dates, which you can find in your Amazon account under "Account & Lists > Manage Prime Membership."
The Amazon One biometric (palm scanning) settlement covers Illinois residents who used Amazon One at participating locations. If you are not an Illinois resident, that specific settlement likely does not apply to you, though other Amazon settlements may. Check each settlement's eligibility criteria in the cards above.
Individual payouts from Amazon settlements vary widely. Privacy and auto-renewal settlements typically pay $25–$150 for basic claims. Amazon Flex and warehouse worker settlements have paid $100–$500+ depending on documented hours. Check the specific settlement card above for current payout estimates.
For most Amazon consumer settlements, your Amazon account information serves as sufficient verification. Many settlements allow self-certification. Claims for documented out-of-pocket losses may require receipts or account statements.
Log into your Amazon account and go to Account & Lists > Your Account. Under "Memberships and Subscriptions" you can see your Prime membership history. Under "Order History" you can view all purchases by year. This is typically sufficient for most Amazon-related settlement claims.

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