Money bearing your name can be found somewhere between the fine print of a data breach notification letter and the checkout receipt you most likely threw away three years ago. Most likely. That’s not a guarantee, but the number of open class action settlements in 2026 that require little to no paperwork to file a claim has increased to the point where it’s worthwhile to ask, particularly if you’ve recently purchased an Android phone, used a gaming website, bought beef, or shopped at Dollar General.
No-proof class action settlements are not as complicated as they seem. Courts frequently acknowledge that it would be impractical and counterproductive to require each plaintiff to provide receipts in cases where a company has been sued for widespread consumer harm, such as price overcharges, data breaches, or false advertising. Alternatively, claimants may provide what attorneys refer to as an attestation, which is a sworn declaration made under penalty of perjury confirming that you were a qualifying consumer during the relevant period. You still have to be honest. Finding a 2017 grocery receipt is simply not necessary. The distinction is important, and the legal system has come to recognize it as a reasonable means of guaranteeing that regular people, not just those with meticulous record-keeping practices, can take part in settlements that they contributed to financing through their purchases.
One of the clearer illustrations of how this operates in reality is the Beef Price Fixing settlement. It is alleged that eight large beef processors banded together to inflate retail prices for consumers while suppressing prices paid to cattle ranchers. You may be able to submit a claim if you bought fresh or frozen beef, specifically chuck, loin, rib, or round cuts, between August 2014 and December 2019. All you need to do is estimate how much you typically spend each month on those items. No receipts. No records of store loyalty cards. Claims may be submitted online, and the deadline is June 30, 2026. The number of claims filed will determine how much you get, but it’s easy to estimate eligible spending for families who purchased beef on a weekly basis for five years.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Topic | No-proof-required class action settlements open in 2026 |
| Key Resource Sites | Top Class Actions, ClassAction.org, Claim Depot |
| Legal Mechanism | Attestation under penalty of perjury (no receipt required) |
| Beef Price Fixing Settlement | Purchases Aug 2014–Dec 2019; deadline June 30, 2026 |
| Avis Data Breach Settlement | Aug 2024 breach; deadline June 21, 2026; pro rata cash payment |
| Amazon Prime Settlement | $2.5 billion; US District Court, Western District of Washington |
| Dollar General Settlement | $8.5 million; up to $20 per household; deadline April 13, 2026 |
| RevitaLash/RevitaBrow Settlement | $4.17 million; $20 payout; deadline April 20, 2026 |
| GameSpot Privacy Settlement | $1.2 million; California residents; deadline April 16, 2026 |
| Google Android Settlement | $135 million; deadline May 9, 2026 |
| Pacific Life Settlement | $58.3 million; California policyholders 2016–2019 |
| Gen Digital TCPA Settlement | $9.95 million; $200–$625 per claim; deadline April 13, 2026 |
| Sutter Health Settlement | $21.5 million; up to $90; deadline April 28, 2026 |

The number of data breach settlements that are open at the same time in 2026 is exceptionally high, and they have developed into their own category of recurring opportunities. People whose information was compromised in the August 2024 breach are covered by the Avis data breach settlement. Since this was a relatively recent incident, many people who received the company’s notification email may still recall receiving it, even if they have since deleted it. A pro rata cash payment is available to qualified claimants without requiring proof of particular out-of-pocket expenses. Similar settlements are available from Capital Health, Panda Restaurant Group, and Excelsior Orthopaedics; those who can prove actual losses will receive up to $5,000, while those who cannot will receive a flat $100 cash payment. The $100 option is the practical choice for the majority of people, and all it takes is verifying that your name was included in the breach notification.
People tend to stop mid-scroll when they see the Amazon Prime settlement. Customers who were enrolled in Amazon Prime subscriptions and allegedly faced challenging cancellation procedures that the FTC described as deceptive are covered by a $2.5 billion settlement that was approved by a US District Court in Washington. The FTC of the Trump administration negotiated the settlement. Class action participation rates are notoriously low, in part because people believe the process is more complicated than it is and in part because the amounts per individual claimant in large settlements can appear small in comparison to the effort required. As is typical, many eligible claimants have not yet filed. However, tiny sums multiplied by millions of people result in a sizable amount of unclaimed money.
The diversity of industries represented in the 2026 settlement landscape is difficult to ignore. Computer memory manufacturer G.Skill consented to pay $2.4 million in response to claims that its DDR-4 and DDR-5 RAM speeds were marketed at levels that could not be reached without making substantial system modifications. Due to deceptive illustrations used to market indexed universal life insurance policies in California between 2016 and 2019, Pacific Life agreed to pay $58.3 million. The eyelash and eyebrow serums RevitaLash and RevitaBrow settled a $4.17 million lawsuit alleging that their products contained an ingredient chemically related to a glaucoma medication that could cause inflammation and darkening of the eyelids without sufficient warning. The $110 product voucher option might be worthwhile for recurring customers, but the $20 payout for lash serum purchasers is unlikely to improve anyone’s financial situation.
Given the volume of these cases, it seems that class action lawsuits serve as a slow-moving form of consumer accountability, catching up with businesses years or even decades after the relevant behavior. Purchases made as early as October 2016 are covered by the Dollar General price overcharge settlement. The Sutter Health privacy settlement dates back to June of 2015. Many customers have truly forgotten they were impacted by the time a settlement is accepted and claims become available. The legal system, at its best, aims to provide compensation to those who earned it through their purchases, including those who were unaware they had a claim coming, which is one of the reasons the no-proof mechanisms exist.
There are actual deadlines, and they don’t get extended. The online claim process usually takes less than ten minutes if any of these settlements apply to your circumstances.
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