⚡ Quick Answer
What is the social media addiction lawsuit? Parents are suing Meta, TikTok, Snap, and Google alleging these companies deliberately engineered platforms to be psychologically addictive to children, using algorithmic recommendation engines, infinite scroll, variable reward notifications, and social validation loops. Lawsuits allege companies had internal research confirming harm to teens but concealed it and continued targeting minors for profit. Over 2,465 cases are pending in federal MDL-3047 before Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in the Northern District of California. In March 2025, a federal judge ruled negligence and wrongful death claims can proceed, rejecting Section 230 and First Amendment defenses.
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Who Qualifies for a Social Media Addiction Lawsuit
Eligibility focuses on minors who developed compulsive social media use that caused documented mental health harm. Parents and legal guardians can file on behalf of their children. Qualifying platforms include Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube, and Roblox.
Qualifying Criteria:
How Social Media Platforms Caused Harm
Lawsuits allege that social media companies had internal research confirming their platforms were harming teens — and chose to conceal it and continue targeting minors for profit. Five core patterns of misconduct are alleged in active cases:
1. Algorithmic Recommendation Engines Designed to Maximize Compulsive Use
Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and Snapchat use algorithms specifically engineered to identify and exploit each user's psychological vulnerabilities — surfacing increasingly engaging content to prevent disengagement. Lawsuits cite internal Meta research showing the company knew Instagram was harmful to teen girls but chose engagement over safety.
2. Variable Reward Notifications Exploiting the Developing Brain
Likes, comments, and notification systems are engineered to trigger dopamine release in patterns identical to slot machine mechanics — creating a cycle of anticipation and reward that is especially powerful in adolescent brains still developing impulse control and emotional regulation. Scientific research confirms these mechanisms rewire the brain's reward system over time.
3. Infinite Scroll and Autoplay Eliminating Natural Stopping Points
Infinite scroll feeds and autoplay video features are deliberately designed to remove natural content endpoints that would otherwise prompt users to stop. These features are patented design choices — not accidents — intended to maximize time-on-platform at the expense of users' ability to disengage voluntarily.
4. Concealing Internal Research Showing Harm to Minors
A 2021 Facebook whistleblower testified before Congress that the company was aware its platforms caused harm to teens but prioritized profits. Internal documents revealed Meta's own researchers concluded Instagram worsened body image issues in teenage girls. Documents presented at the February 2026 bellwether trial further indicated Meta knew preteens were using its apps and disregarded expert safety advice. A marketing professor testifying in the New Mexico trial told the jury Meta calculated teenagers were worth $270 each to Facebook and built detailed user profiles of children as young as age 9.
5. Targeting Minors Without Adequate Safety Protections
Platforms actively recruited underage users while failing to implement age verification, parental notification, or meaningful safety guardrails. A whistleblower who served as Meta's engineering director testified in the New Mexico trial that Meta's own algorithms were "very good at connecting people with interests — and if your interest is little girls, it will be really good at connecting you with little girls." The FTC has opened investigations into Meta, Google, and OpenAI over child safety risks.
Injuries & Consequences Recognized in Active Claims
The strongest cases involve serious, documented mental and physical health consequences directly tied to compulsive social media use during childhood or adolescence.
Social Media Addiction Lawsuit Settlement Factors
Two landmark jury verdicts in two days have fundamentally shifted the litigation landscape. On March 25, 2026, a Los Angeles jury found Meta and Google liable and awarded KGM $6 million total — $3M compensatory plus $3M punitive — the first jury to find these companies liable for addiction-related mental health harm and to find their conduct constituted malice. On March 24, 2026, the New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay $375 million for enabling child sexual exploitation. TikTok and Snap reached confidential individual pre-trial settlements with the KGM plaintiff in January 2026. Individual settlement values will depend on:
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Severity of harm — wrongful death, suicide attempts, psychiatric hospitalization, and eating disorders requiring inpatient treatment typically yield higher compensation
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Age at first exposure — younger children when addiction began generally strengthen claims, as developing brains are more vulnerable
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Documentation strength — medical records, therapy notes, school records, account history, and screen time data are essential to claim value
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Duration and intensity of use — total length of compulsive platform use and daily average hours
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Economic losses — treatment costs, therapy expenses, tutoring, lost educational opportunities, and other out-of-pocket costs
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Verdict benchmarks — the KGM $6M verdict (March 25, 2026) finding malice and awarding punitive damages, the $375M New Mexico verdict (March 24, 2026), and upcoming federal MDL trials (June & August 2026) will directly influence settlement ranges across 2,465+ pending cases. Meta has acknowledged in its 2026 SEC 10-K filing that youth addiction lawsuits could "significantly impact" the company's financial results.
Disclaimer: Projections are educational only and not a guarantee of outcome. Actual results depend on case-specific facts and litigation developments.
Filing Deadlines by State
Each state has strict statutes of limitations for personal injury claims — typically 2–3 years. Many states toll (pause) deadlines for minors until they turn 18, then add additional years. Missing your deadline permanently bars your claim.
| State | Standard SOL | Minor Tolling | Key Activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | 2 years | Yes | 🔴 KGM jury verdict — March 25, 2026: Meta and Google found negligent and liable; $6M total awarded ($3M compensatory + $3M punitive); both companies appealing. Trial Pool 2 scheduled March 9, 2026; Trial Pool 3 scheduled May 11, 2026. |
| New Mexico | 3 years | Yes | 🔴 $375M verdict against Meta — March 24, 2026. First-ever jury verdict against Meta for enabling child sexual exploitation. Phase 2 (judge only) begins May 4, 2026. |
| New York | 3 years | Yes | Active cases; Jan 2025 new lawsuit filed by NY plaintiff against major platforms; Gov. Hochul introduced expanded online child protection legislation Jan 2026. |
| Illinois | 2 years | Until age 20 | Mar 2025 lawsuit alleging depression, anxiety, self-harm, and eating disorders in 17-year-old; therapist-patient privilege upheld by court May 2025. |
| Ohio | 2 years | Yes | May 2025 Kettering family lawsuit filed against Meta and Snap for 16-year-old's mental health harm. |
| Georgia | 2 years | Yes | Selected as one of six school district bellwether cases; Apr 2025 wrongful death suicide lawsuit filed. |
| Texas | 2 years | Yes | Dec 2024 family lawsuit against Meta, Snap, TikTok, and Google for two children's mental health injuries. |
| North Carolina | 3 years | Yes | Selected as bellwether school district; Nov 2024 wrongful death suit over 15-year-old's Instagram-linked suicide. |
| All Other States | Typically 2–3 years | Varies | Active cases filed in Kansas, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Missouri, Connecticut, South Carolina, Massachusetts, Vermont, and more. Do not assume it is too late — consult an attorney immediately. |
Do not assume it is too late without speaking to an attorney. Minor tolling and discovery rules can significantly extend your filing window. The consultation is free.
Social Media Addiction Lawsuit Updates — 2026
Last updated April 2026. We update this section monthly with new case filings, MDL developments, trial dates, and regulatory actions.
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April 2026 🔴 NewMDL Grows to 2,465 Cases — "Careless People" Former Meta Executive Cleared to Testify Over Company's Objections: The federal MDL (MDL-3047) has grown to 2,465 pending cases as of April 2026. In a significant development, Magistrate Judge Peter H. Kang ruled — over Meta's objections — that a former Meta executive and author of the tell-all memoir "Careless People" will be permitted to testify about the company's addictive design practices in the MDL. The ruling is expected to bring damaging insider testimony about Meta's internal culture and decision-making into the federal trials. Meta has also acknowledged in its 2026 SEC 10-K filing that youth addiction lawsuits and mass arbitration demands could "significantly impact" the company's financial results — a disclosure that will feature prominently in plaintiff arguments going forward.
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April 2026 🔴 NewMeta and Google Announce Appeal of KGM Verdict — Broader MDL Continues Unaffected: Both Meta and Google have formally announced they will appeal the March 25 KGM verdict. Meta's spokesperson stated: "We respectfully disagree with the verdict and will appeal. Teen mental health is profoundly complex and cannot be linked to a single app." Google called the verdict a misunderstanding of YouTube's platform. Legal experts note the appeal does not pause the broader MDL — 2,465 other cases continue advancing toward the June 15 and August 6, 2026 federal bellwether trials. With the jury finding Meta acted with malice, the appeal faces a high standard to overturn the punitive damages award. The verdict has already been compared by multiple legal scholars to the first tobacco verdicts that ultimately opened the floodgates to industry-wide settlements.
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March 25, 2026 🔴 Breaking VerdictLA Jury Finds Meta and Google Liable — $6 Million Total Awarded, Including Punitive Damages: A Los Angeles jury found Meta (Instagram) and Google (YouTube) negligent and liable for the depression, anxiety, and body dysmorphia suffered by plaintiff KGM (Kaley), a now-20-year-old from Chico, California. The jury awarded $3 million in compensatory damages (Meta: 70%, Google: 30%), then in a separate punitive phase found both companies acted with malice — awarding an additional $2.1M from Meta and $900K from Google for a total of $6 million. KGM testified that she began using YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 11, spending up to 16 hours on Instagram in a single day. Deliberations spanned nearly 44 hours across nine days. This is the first jury verdict holding Meta and Google liable for addiction-related mental health harm, and the first time a jury found a social media platform's conduct rose to the level of malice. The verdict is expected to accelerate settlement pressure across 2,465+ pending cases, including the federal MDL bellwether trials set for June 15 and August 6, 2026.
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March 24, 2026 🔴 Breaking VerdictNew Mexico Jury Orders Meta to Pay $375 Million — First-Ever Verdict Against Meta for Child Sexual Exploitation: In a landmark decision, a New Mexico jury found Meta violated state consumer protection law and ordered the company to pay $375 million in civil penalties — the first-ever jury verdict against Meta on claims it enabled child sexual exploitation on its platforms. The jury found Meta made false and misleading statements about platform safety and engaged in "unconscionable" trade practices that exploited the vulnerabilities of children. New Mexico AG Raúl Torrez called it "a historic victory for every child and family who has paid the price for Meta's choice to put profits over kids' safety." A whistleblower who served as Meta's engineering director testified that Meta's algorithms were "very good at connecting people with interests — and if your interest is little girls, it will be really good at connecting you with little girls." Meta says it will appeal. A second phase of the case begins May 4, 2026, where a judge will determine whether Meta must fund public programs and make structural changes to its platforms. Midway through trial, Meta announced it would stop supporting end-to-end-encrypted messaging on Instagram — widely seen as a direct response to testimony that encryption shielded predators from law enforcement.
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March 17, 2026 🔴 Verdict PendingClosing Arguments Conclude — Plaintiff's Attorneys Compare Meta & YouTube to "Lions Attacking Gazelles": Closing arguments wrapped in the landmark KGM bellwether trial in Los Angeles Superior Court. Attorneys for the plaintiff told the jury that Meta and YouTube deliberately targeted the most vulnerable young users for maximum engagement, comparing them to predators going after the weakest prey. A verdict against Meta or YouTube was widely anticipated to influence settlement dynamics across the 2,465+ cases pending in MDL-3047 and the California JCCP.
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March 3, 2026 NewNew Mexico Trial: Expert Testifies Meta Valued Each Teenager at $270 and Built "Personas" of Users as Young as Age 9: A marketing professor testifying in the New Mexico state court trial against Meta told the jury the company calculated that teenagers were worth $270 each to Facebook, and that it created detailed user profiles of children as young as 9 years old in an effort to better target and monetize them. The testimony added to a growing body of trial evidence showing platforms treated children as a monetizable audience rather than vulnerable users requiring protection.
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February 26, 2026 TrialPlaintiff KGM Testifies — Spent 16 Hours on Instagram in a Single Day: The 20-year-old plaintiff at the center of the first California JCCP bellwether trial took the stand to describe growing up addicted to social media platforms. She testified she began using platforms as young as age 6 and was on them constantly throughout her childhood, alleging the compulsive use exacerbated her depression and suicidal thoughts. Records presented in court showed she spent 16 hours on Instagram in a single day. Meta and YouTube are the two remaining defendants after TikTok and Snap settled before trial began.
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February 18, 2026 TrialMark Zuckerberg Testifies Before a Jury for the First Time: Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg took the stand in a Los Angeles courtroom — the first time a major social media CEO has testified before a jury in a youth addiction case. Internal documents presented at trial indicated Meta knew preteens were using its apps, aimed to maximize scrolling time, and disregarded expert safety advice. Meta disputes the characterization and says the company has a longstanding commitment to supporting young people.
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February 17, 2026 TrialStanford Addiction Expert Testifies Social Media Addiction Is Real: Anna Lembke, a Stanford University professor of psychiatry and addiction medicine, testified in the California bellwether trial that social media addiction is a genuine clinical condition that can cause or worsen anxiety, depression, and suicidal thoughts in young users. Her testimony directly supports plaintiffs' theory that platforms are defectively designed to create compulsive use in adolescents.
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February 3, 2026Jury Selection Begins in First California Bellwether Trial: Jury selection got underway in Los Angeles Superior Court in the landmark KGM case — the first social media addiction bellwether trial to reach a jury in the United States. With TikTok and Snap having already settled, Meta and YouTube proceeded to trial as the remaining defendants.
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January 27, 2026TikTok Settles With KGM Plaintiff on Eve of Trial: On the very day jury selection was set to begin, TikTok agreed to a confidential settlement with plaintiff KGM, avoiding a public jury trial. Specific financial terms were not disclosed. TikTok remains a defendant in other youth social media addiction lawsuits across federal MDL-3047 and state court proceedings.
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January 2026 — EarlySnap Settles Days Before Trial; MDL Reaches 2,465 Cases: Snap Inc. reached a confidential pre-trial settlement with plaintiff KGM just days before opening statements were scheduled. Despite resolving this individual claim, Snap remains a defendant in other cases across MDL-3047 and the California JCCP. The federal MDL now includes over 2,465 pending cases.
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January 2026Federal MDL Bellwether Trials Set for June 15 & August 6, 2026; Defense Motion Rejected: Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers set the first two federal MDL bellwether trials: school district claims on June 15, 2026, and state Attorney General claims on August 6, 2026. The court rejected a platform motion for summary judgment that sought to dismiss negligence and public nuisance claims. In the California JCCP, a judge ruled that 10 of 11 proposed plaintiff experts may testify.
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November 21, 202529 State Attorneys General Seek Consolidated MDL Trial: A coalition of 29 state attorneys general asked Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers to consolidate their claims into a single MDL trial, arguing that Meta and other platforms knowingly endangered children's mental health through addictive design. Meta pushed back, urging individual trials for each state's consumer protection claims.
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March 6, 2025Key Ruling: Negligence and Wrongful Death Claims Can Proceed: A federal judge ruled that negligence and wrongful death claims against major social media companies can move forward, rejecting First Amendment and Section 230 defenses. The court found platforms have a legal duty of care to prevent fostering compulsive use and addiction among young users — a landmark ruling for the litigation.
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January 14, 2025California Judge Allows Social Media Lawsuits to Proceed: A California state judge rejected Meta's, YouTube's, Snap's, and TikTok's attempt to dismiss failure-to-warn claims, ruling the lawsuits can move forward and setting the stage for bellwether trials in 2025–2026.
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October 16, 2024Judge Rules Meta Must Face State Lawsuits: U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ruled that Meta must face lawsuits brought by over 30 states alleging Facebook and Instagram contribute to teen addiction and mental health problems. The judge also rejected motions to dismiss by Meta, TikTok, YouTube, and Snapchat in personal injury cases.
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June 17, 2024U.S. Surgeon General Calls for Warning Labels on Social Media: U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy called on Congress to mandate mental health warning labels on social media platforms — citing their documented impact on teen mental health and drawing direct comparisons to tobacco warning label requirements.
Find Out If Your Child Qualifies — Free Case Review
Attorneys are reviewing social media addiction cases nationwide. You pay nothing unless compensation is recovered.
Start My Free Case ReviewHow the Social Media Addiction Lawsuit Process Works
Attorneys handle social media addiction cases on contingency — you pay nothing unless compensation is recovered.
- Free confidential consultation — Discuss your child's social media history, symptoms, and documented harms with an attorney at no cost. No records required before reaching out.
- Case review and evidence gathering — Your attorney reviews medical records, therapy notes, educational records, platform account history, screen time data, and all evidence of harm. Attorneys can assist in obtaining records you don't yet have.
- Identifying the platforms — Your attorney confirms which platforms are involved and aligns your case with the appropriate legal pathway — federal MDL-3047, California JCCP, or individual state court proceedings.
- Filing the lawsuit — Your attorney files suit in the appropriate jurisdiction. Federal cases join MDL-3047 before Judge Gonzalez Rogers in the Northern District of California; state cases may be filed in California JCCP or individual state courts.
- Discovery — Both sides exchange evidence: internal company documents, algorithm design records, internal research on teen harm, marketing materials targeting minors, and user data.
- Expert testimony — Child psychologists, addiction specialists, neuroscientists, and social media design experts testify about addictive features and their documented harm to developing brains. A former Meta executive and author of the memoir "Careless People" has been cleared to testify in the federal MDL over Meta's objections.
- Settlement or trial — The KGM jury's $6M total verdict finding malice (March 25, 2026), the New Mexico $375M verdict (March 24, 2026), and TikTok and Snap's pre-trial settlements all demonstrate defendants will pay to avoid or limit jury exposure. The federal MDL bellwether trials in June and August 2026 will establish further settlement benchmarks. Most individual cases are expected to resolve through settlement. You have the final say on any offer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who can sue social media companies for addiction?
Parents or legal guardians can file lawsuits on behalf of minors (under 18) who developed social media addiction. Young adults who were harmed as minors may also file their own claims. The key requirement is that harmful use began during childhood or adolescence and caused documented mental health harm such as depression, anxiety, self-harm, eating disorders, or suicidal ideation.
What platforms are named in social media addiction lawsuits?
Current lawsuits target Meta (Facebook and Instagram), TikTok (ByteDance), Snap Inc. (Snapchat), Google (YouTube), and in some cases Roblox. These platforms are alleged to have intentionally designed addictive features — including infinite scroll, algorithmic recommendation engines, variable reward notifications, and social validation loops — that exploit developing brains.
What is the current status of social media lawsuits? (April 2026)
Two landmark verdicts in two days have transformed the litigation landscape. On March 25, 2026, a Los Angeles jury found Meta and Google liable for addiction-related mental health harm, awarding plaintiff KGM $6 million total ($3M compensatory + $3M punitive, finding both companies acted with malice). On March 24, 2026, a New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay $375 million in civil penalties for enabling child sexual exploitation. Both companies are appealing. TikTok and Snap both settled confidentially before the KGM trial began. A former Meta executive has been cleared to testify in the federal MDL. Federal bellwether trials are scheduled for June 15 and August 6, 2026. Over 2,465 cases are pending in MDL-3047.
What is MDL-3047 and what is its current status?
MDL-3047 is the federal Social Media Adolescent Addiction/Personal Injury Products Liability Litigation, overseen by Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in the Northern District of California. As of April 2026, the MDL includes over 2,465 pending cases. The first California JCCP bellwether trial (KGM) resulted in a $6M verdict on March 25, 2026 — Meta and Google were found liable and their conduct found to constitute malice, with punitive damages awarded. Federal MDL bellwether trials are scheduled for June 15 and August 6, 2026.
What evidence do I need to file a social media addiction lawsuit?
Key evidence includes account history and screen time records from Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, or YouTube; medical or therapy records documenting depression, anxiety, eating disorders, self-harm, or suicidal ideation; school records showing academic decline; and any treatment records.
You do not need records in hand before reaching out — your attorney can help identify and obtain what is needed.
How much are social media addiction lawsuit settlements worth?
Two verdicts in two days set major new benchmarks. On March 25, 2026, a Los Angeles jury awarded plaintiff KGM $6 million total ($3M compensatory + $3M punitive), finding Meta acted with malice — the first jury verdict holding Meta and Google liable for addiction-related mental health harm. On March 24, 2026, the New Mexico jury awarded $375 million against Meta for enabling child sexual exploitation. TikTok and Snap reached confidential individual pre-trial settlements with the KGM plaintiff in January 2026. Individual settlement values will depend on severity of harm, age at first exposure, duration of use, documentation of mental health injuries, treatment costs, and evidence of company knowledge. Meta acknowledged in its 2026 SEC 10-K that these lawsuits could "significantly impact" its financial results.
Has Section 230 protected social media companies from these lawsuits?
Not entirely. In March 2025, a federal judge ruled that negligence and wrongful death claims can proceed, rejecting Section 230 and First Amendment defenses. The March 25, 2026 KGM jury verdict finding Meta and Google liable — and the March 24, 2026 New Mexico $375 million verdict — both confirm these defenses are not insurmountable. The court found platforms have a duty of care to prevent compulsive use and addiction among young users.
Is there a deadline to file a social media addiction lawsuit?
Yes. Statutes of limitations vary by state, typically 2–3 years for personal injury claims. Many states toll deadlines for minors until they turn 18, then add additional years. Do not assume it is too late without speaking to an attorney — the consultation is free and the filing window may be longer than you think.
Do I need to go to court to receive compensation?
Most mass tort cases settle before trial. TikTok and Snap already reached confidential settlements with the first bellwether plaintiff before trial began. The KGM jury verdict finding Meta and Google liable and their conduct constituting malice (March 25, 2026), combined with the New Mexico $375M verdict (March 24, 2026), will put significant pressure on defendants to resolve remaining claims. You will have the final say on whether to accept any settlement offer. Attorneys work on contingency — you pay nothing unless compensation is recovered.