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Flo Health, Inc., Google LLC, and analytics firm Flurry, Inc. have agreed to a combined $59.5 million class action settlement to bring an end to a major data privacy lawsuit. The legal action alleged that the highly popular Flo Period & Ovulation Tracker application improperly shared users’ confidential reproductive health metrics with third-party tech giants without proper disclosure.
The sweeping multi-party settlement received its preliminary green light from a federal judge in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on April 16, 2026. The consolidated lawsuit, officially titled In re Period Tracker Data Privacy Litigation, combined multiple claims brought forth by frustrated app users. Under the terms of the dynamic resolution, Google will contribute $48 million, Flo Health will supply $8 million, and Flurry will provide $3.5 million to completely settle the claims.
Everyday people download fitness, cycle, and pregnancy apps with the reasonable expectation that their intimate biographical choices will remain hidden from commercial advertisers. When companies integrate tracking tools into their digital software, corporate platforms gain a direct window into the private lives of consumers. This comprehensive $59.5 million settlement seeks to hold these tech corporations accountable for data mining practices while providing real financial compensation to the millions of women impacted.
The class action privacy litigation began after whistleblowers and regulatory actions revealed that the Flo app was embedded with external software development kits. According to court records, these tracking codes automatically gathered internal user inputs and transmitted them directly to third-party advertising ecosystems, including Google and Facebook. The unauthorized sharing occurred despite explicit promises to the public that personal medical logs would never be distributed or sold.
The sensitive files exposed during the data privacy incident included exact dates of menstruation cycles, ovulation predictions, pregnancy tracking details, and unique digital device identifiers. Marketing agencies can leverage this detailed profile of an individual’s reproductive life cycle to deploy highly aggressive, behaviorally targeted digital ads. Consumers alleged that this quiet exchange of personal health files constituted an egregious intrusion into their digital privacy.
The entire $59.5 million cash fund will be utilized to cover notice campaigns, administrative expenses, and legal representation, with the remaining millions flowing directly to eligible app users who file a timely claim form. Because the settlement fund will be split proportionally among participants, there is no single fixed amount guaranteed for every individual claimant.
Legal teams working on behalf of the consumers estimate that the average individual payout will range from $12.69 to $31.94. The exact cash total you receive will depend heavily on the final tally of valid claims approved by the settlement administrator. If only a small percentage of the nearly 10 million potential class members file a claim, the individual cash payouts for everyday people could swing noticeably higher.
While the core settlement class spans the entire nation, residents of California have access to an enhanced compensation structure. Because of the strict statutory protections established under California’s data protection frameworks—such as the California Invasion of Privacy Act—the court has authorized a separate subclass distinction for users in the Golden State.
If you lived in California during the class period and entered your personal reproductive or pregnancy milestones into the Flo application, you may be eligible to receive double the pro rata share of other claimants. When filling out your official paperwork, you must answer a specific residency verification question to confirm you were located in California to unlock this higher compensation tier.
Because this data privacy settlement does not require consumers to upload past receipts or bank statements, the court-appointed administrator relies on the absolute honesty of participants. You do not need to provide technical proof of app usage to submit a basic claim, meaning you can complete the process even if you have since deleted the application or replaced your smartphone.
However, all applicants must sign their digital forms under penalty of perjury. This means you are legally certifying that you genuinely used the Flo application to record your reproductive health milestones during the specific target dates. The administrator will match incoming claims against historical database records provided by Flo Health to weed out fraudulent entries before any money is distributed.
The legal arguments underpinning the period tracker litigation reflect a massive national shift toward digital transparency and user consent. The plaintiffs primarily asserted that the tech companies violated the California Invasion of Privacy Act and the California Confidentiality of Medical Information Act by intercepting and utilizing protected medical footprints for capital gain.
The litigation also tracked prior enforcement actions by the Federal Trade Commission, which had ordered Flo Health to stop sharing consumer health files without affirmative consent. Flo Health, Google, and Flurry have strongly denied all allegations of unlawful conduct and maintain that they did nothing wrong. The defendants opted to establish the $59.5 million settlement to eliminate the immense financial burden and operational delays of prolonged federal trials.
Determining whether you are eligible to claim a portion of the settlement fund comes down to a clear timeline and specific app behavior. You are considered a valid member of the nationwide class if you utilized the Flo App within the United States at any point between November 1, 2016, and February 28, 2019, and actively entered menstruation or pregnancy details into the interface.
The settlement administration team is deploying an extensive notice plan to alert the estimated 10 million affected individuals. Notices are being distributed via email, and targeted advertisements are rolling out across major social media platforms such as TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook. If you see a notification or receive an email, it means your digital profile matches the class parameters.
To secure your share of the privacy fund, you must take active steps to declare your involvement. The fastest and most efficient way to participate is to navigate to the court-approved website at PeriodTrackerDataPrivacyLitigation.com to fill out and submit an electronic claim form. The entire digital process can be completed in just a few minutes.
The claim portal allows you to select your preferred method for digital reimbursement, including automated links through popular platforms like PayPal, Venmo, Apple Pay, or standard direct deposit. If you prefer to receive a traditional physical check, you can indicate that choice on the form or mail a paper copy to the administrator. All forms must be finalized or postmarked by October 15, 2026.
Filing your paperwork before the October deadline ensures your spot in line, but funds will not move out immediately. The presiding federal judge has scheduled a formal final approval hearing for October 29, 2026, at 11:00 a.m. Pacific Time. During this session, the court will evaluate the final participation rates and officially decide whether to authorize the release of the $59.5 million.
Once the court signs the final approval order, the administrator will begin the extensive process of verifying forms and organizing distributions. Assuming no external legal appeals or administrative roadblocks disrupt the timeline, digital deposits and physical paper checks should begin hitting consumers’ accounts in the months following the final autumn hearing.
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