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Hungryroot

If you completed Hungryroot’s food-preference quiz or onboarding flow within the last two years to sign up for their meal or grocery service, you may be eligible to pursue compensation. Up to $5,000 potential recovery.
What happened?

Some customers allege that Hungryroot collected their personal information, then shared that information with third-party companies including social media platforms and advertising networks without meaningful notice or consent. According to the claims, this data sharing may have violated privacy laws.

How We May Help

Class Action U is here to help you understand your rights and get you in touch with a skilled attorney who may guide you through the legal process.

What You Can Do

If you completed Hungryroot’s food-preference quiz or onboarding flow within the last two years to sign up for their meal or grocery service, take action now by filling out the form linked below to determine whether you may qualify to pursue a legal claim.

Some customers allege that Hungryroot failed to disclose that their quiz answers and personal information would be shared with third parties before they completed the mandatory onboarding flow. When users entered their food preferences, dietary restrictions, health goals, and lifestyle information into Hungryroot’s quiz, some customers claim this personal data was transmitted in real time to outside companies including Meta, X (Twitter), Snapchat, TikTok, Google Analytics, and other ad tech platforms. The claims allege this was done without proper notice or consent and may have violated wiretapping and privacy laws.

If you meet the following criteria, you may be eligible to participate in the arbitration process and may be eligible to pursue a legal claim.

  1. Age Requirement: You are 18 years or older.
  2. Hungryroot User: You personally used Hungryroot’s website or app within the last two years for meal planning, grocery recommendations, food preferences, or account signup purposes.
  3. Quiz or Onboarding Participation: You completed or answered questions in Hungryroot’s food-preference quiz, onboarding flow, or recommendation tool.
  4. Personal Information Shared: You provided information to Hungryroot about your food preferences, dietary needs, health goals, lifestyle, or eating habits.
  5. No Prior Claims: You have not previously submitted a form about this Hungryroot issue to another law firm or attorney, and you have not received payment from any Hungryroot lawsuit, settlement, or legal dispute involving this issue.

If you believe you have been impacted, here’s what you can do:

  1. Gather Your Documentation: Have ready any proof of your Hungryroot use, such as screenshots of your account, quiz answers, order confirmations, subscription receipts, Hungryroot emails showing quiz results or recommendations, or browser history showing visits to Hungryroot’s website or quiz page. You can upload documentation when you complete the form.
  2. Prepare Your Information: Have your personal details available, including your first and last name, primary email address, phone number, and mailing address. Note the approximate date (month and year) when you completed Hungryroot’s quiz or onboarding flow, and the state where you were located at that time.
  3. Complete the Form: If you believe you qualify, complete the form and submit your documentation to learn if you may qualify to pursue compensation.
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Frequently Asked Questions

You may qualify if you used the company’s product or service during the time period when the issue affecting other consumers occurred, agreed to the company’s terms of service (which include a mandatory arbitration clause), and experienced the same problem affecting the larger group.

To confirm your eligibility, gather proof of use, such as receipts, account statements, or confirmation emails and complete the intake form to work with our attorneys.

Compensation varies based on your individual damages; there’s no flat payout amount. Settlement amounts are awarded based on each person’s specific circumstances, which often leads to higher individual payouts compared to class action lawsuits where a single settlement fund is divided equally among many participants. Once settled, arbitration decisions are legally binding, meaning the company must pay your full settlement amount.

The mass arbitration process starts with intake and evidence gathering, followed by sending a Notice of Dispute to the company. Once the filing deadline passes, claims are officially filed and a Process Arbitrator is appointed to manage administrative matters. The parties then enter a global mediation phase to negotiate settlement within 120 days. If claims don’t settle, select cases move to a bellwether phase where an arbitrator rules on representative test cases. Finally, after settlement or individual awards are made, claimants receive their compensation payouts.

Nothing. In most cases handled by our partner firms, consumers pay $0 out of pocket to start their claim. Your attorneys will cover any filing fees as part of their contingency arrangement, and the company is required to pay the arbitrator’s fees and most administrative costs. For people with legitimate claims, there is virtually no financial risk in joining a mass arbitration.

A mass arbitration typically takes about 8 to 18 months to resolve, which is significantly shorter than a federal court lawsuit that averages 31 months. The timeline includes intake and evidence gathering (30-90 days), notice of dispute (30-60 days), a mandatory global mediation period within 120 days, and potentially a bellwether phase (6-12 months) if the case doesn’t settle earlier.

Mass arbitration involves filing many individual claims against the same company that are coordinated together, with each claim remaining separate and potentially resulting in individual settlements.

Class actions consolidate all claims into a single lawsuit resolved by a court.

Key differences include:

  1. Speed: arbitration is typically faster
  2. Control: Arbitration gives individuals more control over their claim
  3. Privacy: mass arbitration is confidential while class actions are public record.

No, mass arbitration takes place outside of court through a private arbitration process. Most hearings can be held virtually via telephone or videoconference, depending on the claim amount and circumstances.

Once the company settles, individual payments are distributed to claimants based on their specific damages. Rather than dividing one settlement fund equally like a class action, each person receives compensation calculated according to their unique circumstances and the extent of their harm. The settlement is legally binding, meaning the company must pay all awarded amounts. This individualized approach often results in higher payouts per person compared to class action settlements.