Flo Period Tracker Data Privacy Class Action Settlement ($59.5 Million)
Flo Period Tracker Data Privacy Class Action Settlement
Google, Flo Health, and Flurry have agreed to pay a combined $59.5 million ($48M, $8M, and $3.5M respectively) to settle claims that Flo shared Flo App users' menstruation and pregnancy information with Flurry, Meta, and Google's SDKs without consent. Class members who used the Flo App and entered menstruation or pregnancy information between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019 can submit a claim for a pro rata share of the fund.
Settlement fund
$59.5M
Common fund
Top payout
Pro rata share
California Subclass members get 2x the pro rata share
Claim deadline
Oct 15, 2026
94 days remaining
You may be owed money
Filing is free and takes a few minutes. Deadline: Oct 15, 2026.
Do you qualify?
You are a Class Member if ALL of the following apply:
- You used the Flo App in the United States between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019, and entered menstruation and/or pregnancy information into the app during that time (nationwide Class).
- California Subclass: you also lived in California during that time. California Subclass members receive twice the pro rata share of other Class members.
- You did not previously request to be excluded from the Class in connection with the June 2025 class notice. The opt-out deadline (July 20, 2025) has already passed, so all remaining Class members are eligible unless excluded by definition.
- Excluded: Flo, Google, and Flurry, their subsidiaries, parents, and current or present employees, officers, and directors; the presiding judge and magistrate and their families; persons who properly excluded themselves by July 20, 2025; and Plaintiffs' and Defendants' counsel.
Not sure if you qualify? Email info@PeriodTrackerDataPrivacyLitigation.com, call toll-free 1-866-778-9626, or visit PeriodTrackerDataPrivacyLitigation.com.
What happened
Plaintiffs alleged that between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019, Flo Health incorporated software development kits (SDKs) from Flurry, Meta Platforms (formerly Facebook), and Google into the Flo period and ovulation tracker app, and that Flo shared users' menstruation and/or pregnancy information, along with device identifiers, with those companies through the SDKs. Plaintiffs claimed this violated California's Confidentiality of Medical Information Act, the California Invasion of Privacy Act, common law privacy rights, and breach of contract.
Flo, Google, and Flurry deny all of the allegations, deny they violated any laws, deny that personal or health information was shared, and deny they did anything wrong. The Court has not decided whether any defendant did anything wrong. A separate trial against the non-settling defendant, Meta, concluded on August 1, 2025, with a jury verdict in Plaintiffs' favor; Class members eligible for money from that verdict will be contacted separately, and responding to this settlement notice does not affect those rights.
How to file a claim
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1. Confirm you are eligible
You must have used the Flo App in the U.S. between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019, and entered menstruation and/or pregnancy information during that time. California residents who also lived in California during that window qualify for the California Subclass.
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2. Understand your payout
There is no fixed per-claimant amount. Each Authorized Claimant receives a pro rata share of the Net Settlement Fund (the $59.5 million fund minus Court-approved fees, costs, and service awards). California Subclass members receive twice the pro rata share of other Class members to reflect the added value of California's statutory privacy damages. Payments under $1 are not issued.
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3. File online or by mail
Submit the Claim Form online at periodtrackerdataprivacylitigation.com/file-a-claim by 11:59 p.m. Pacific Time on October 15, 2026, or mail a paper Claim Form (postmarked by October 15, 2026) to: Period Tracker Data Privacy Litigation, P.O. Box 173126, Milwaukee, WI 53217.
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4. Receive your payment
Payments are issued after the Court grants final approval at the October 29, 2026 Fairness Hearing and any appeals are resolved. The appeal process can take a year or more. No follow-up is required once your claim is submitted.
Key dates
- Jul 20, 2025 Opt-out & objection deadline Passed
- Oct 15, 2026 Claim filing deadline Upcoming
- Oct 29, 2026 Final Fairness Hearing (11:00 a.m. PT, Courtroom 11, 19th Floor, or remote) Upcoming
- TBD after final approval Payments issued to claimants Pending
The Final Approval Hearing is scheduled for October 29, 2026 at 11:00 a.m. Pacific Time in Courtroom 11, 19th Floor, at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, 450 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94102, and may also be held remotely. The Court may move the hearing, so check PeriodTrackerDataPrivacyLitigation.com for updates before traveling.
Where the money is going
This is a non-reversionary common fund made up of separately negotiated settlements: $48,000,000 from Google, $8,000,000 from Flo, and $3,500,000 from Flurry. Notice and administration costs, taxes, service awards, and attorneys' fees and litigation expenses come out of the combined $59.5 million before pro rata payments are calculated for Class members.
All amounts listed above are pending and subject to final court approval at the October 29, 2026 Fairness Hearing. If valid claims exceed what remains of the Net Settlement Fund, payments will be reduced on a pro rata basis. Unclaimed funds will be redistributed to Authorized Claimants where feasible, then donated to a Court-approved non-profit.
Common questions
How much money will I receive?
There is no fixed per-claimant amount. Your payment depends on the number of timely, valid claims submitted, the fees and costs the Court approves, and whether you qualify for the California Subclass. Authorized Claimants who document California Subclass membership receive twice the pro rata share of other Class members. Payments under $1 are not issued. No recovery is guaranteed and actual payments could be far lower than the estimates discussed here.
Do I need to submit proof of purchase?
The notice does not describe a documentation requirement to submit a basic Claim Form, but California Subclass members who want the doubled pro rata share should be prepared to provide reasonable documentation showing California residency during the November 1, 2016 to February 28, 2019 class period. Review the Claim Form at periodtrackerdataprivacylitigation.com/file-a-claim for the exact fields requested.
What if I didn’t receive a notice?
Yes. If you used the Flo App in the U.S. between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019 and entered menstruation and/or pregnancy information, you are likely a Class Member and can submit a Claim Form even if you did not receive a direct notice. For help, email info@PeriodTrackerDataPrivacyLitigation.com or call 1-866-778-9626.
Does staying in the class affect my right to sue later?
Yes. The deadline to exclude yourself (opt out) from the Class was July 20, 2025 and has passed. Unless you excluded yourself by that date, you are bound by the Settlements and give up the right to sue Flo, Google, and Flurry separately over the claims in this case. The full release language is in the Settlement Agreements at PeriodTrackerDataPrivacyLitigation.com.
When will payments be sent out?
The Court will hold the Final Approval Hearing on October 29, 2026 at 11:00 a.m. Pacific Time. Payments are issued only after the Court grants final approval and any appeals are resolved, which can take a year or more. No action is required after a valid Claim Form is submitted; check PeriodTrackerDataPrivacyLitigation.com for status updates.
Dapeer Law, P.A.
Consumer class action attorneys based in South Florida. We track settlements so you don’t have to.
Similar open settlements
This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Dapeer Law, P.A. is not the administrator of this settlement and is not affiliated with Flo Health, Inc., Google LLC, and Flurry, Inc., A.B. Data, Ltd. (the Settlement Administrator), or Class Counsel Christian Levis, Esq. of Lowey Dannenberg, P.C., Carol C. Villegas, Esq. of Labaton Keller Sucharow LLP, and Diana J. Zinser, Esq. of Spector Roseman & Kodroff, P.C. The case is Frasco, et al. v. Flo Health, Inc., Meta Platforms, Inc., Google, LLC, and Flurry, Inc., Case No. 3:21-cv-00757-JD, pending in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California before the Honorable James Donato. Class representatives are Erica Frasco, Sarah Wellman, Jennifer Chen, Tesha Gamino, and Autumn Meigs. Flo, Google, and Flurry denies wrongdoing. This website is attorney advertising. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.