Overview
- The settlement allocates $149 million for the March 30 breach and $28 million for the July 12 breach.
- Notices and claim instructions were sent in early August to millions of affected U.S. account holders.
- The March incident exposed names, addresses, email addresses, birth dates, passcodes and Social Security numbers.
- Customers can seek up to $5,000 for documented losses from the first breach or up to $2,500 for losses from the second, with tiered payouts available.
- Class members must file claims by November 18, 2025, with opt-out or objection requests due October 17 ahead of a December 3 final approval hearing.