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Social Media Addiction Settlement Reached To Resolve Lawsuit Set for June 2026 Trial

Social Media Addiction Settlement Reached To Resolve Lawsuit Set for June 2026 Trial

The first federal social media addiction bellwether trial, which was scheduled to begin next month, has been cancelled after a Kentucky school district reached a settlement with Meta and other social media platforms.

The lawsuit, filed by Breathitt County Board of Education, accused the owners of Facebook, Snapchat, TikTok and other sites of causing serious educational, developmental and mental health problems for youths in the school district by designing social media apps to be intentionally addictive and harmful. 

The school district claims social media addictions suffered by its students have caused the board to expend significant resources to combat the problem by providing tutoring and counseling for those affected.

The complaint is one of 2,500 similar federal social media addiction lawsuits filed by school districts, states and individuals nationwide over the sitesโ€™ compulsive properties. Plaintiffs say the platforms were intentionally designed to hook useful and impressionable young minds, regardless of the potential outcomes, which can reportedly include anxiety, depression, eating disorders, behavioral problems, self-harm and suicide.

In addition, much of the litigation alleges that the companies knew their platforms posed mental health risks to children, but continued to prioritize engagement and profits over user safety.

Social-Media-Addiction-Attorneys
Social-Media-Addiction-Attorneys

Social Media Addiction Settlement

Given common issues of fact and law, all federal social media addiction lawsuits have been consolidated as part of a multidistrict litigation (MDL) in the Northern District of California before U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, who is overseeing coordinated discovery and pretrial proceedings. Judge Rogers is also having the parties prepare for a series of โ€œbellwetherโ€ early test trials.

The first federal social media bellwether trial was scheduled to begin on June 15, involving the Breathitt County school district claims. However, on May 21 the parties issued a joint stipulation of voluntary dismissal (PDF) to Judge Rogers, announcing they have resolved the litigation through a settlement agreement.

Meta was the last defendant in the Breathitt lawsuit, after Snap, TikTok and YouTube had already settled the litigation earlier. No terms of the settlement were released. However, the school district had been seeking more than $60 million in damages.

Following the settlement announcement, Judge Rogers issued a case management order (PDF) indicating that the next two bellwether trials will involve claims by the Tucson Unified School District and Charleston County School District. The order does not specifically announce which of the two claims will be selected.

โ€œJury selection shall occur on February 3, 2027 with opening statements and evidence to proceed on Monday, February 8, 2027. The Court will prepare both cases for trial so that in the event the first resolves, the second can proceed.โ€

– U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, Northern District of California

Social Media Addiction Lawsuit Trials

Alongside the federal litigation, a number of social media addiction lawsuits filed in state courts have already gone to trial. In March, a Los Angeles jury found that Meta and Google should pay $6 million in damages to a woman who said she suffered anxiety and depression due to social media addiction fostered by apps like Facebook and YouTube when she was a minor. 

Only a couple days earlier, a New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay $375 million in damages to the state, after finding the company liable for mental health problems linked to social media addiction among teens. 

While all of these trials are being closely watched, the outcomes are not binding on other claims. However, their results could help the parties reach more social media addiction lawsuit settlements, preventing thousands of prolonged and expensive trials.

Following completion of the bellwether trials, if no global settlement or other resolution has been reached to resolve the litigation, Judge Rogers will likely begin remanding lawsuits back to their originating districts for individual trial dates.

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Irvin Jackson
Written By: Irvin Jackson

Senior Legal Journalist & Contributing Editor

Irvin Jackson is a senior investigative reporter at AboutLawsuits.com with more than 30 years of experience covering mass tort litigation, environmental policy, and consumer safety. He previously served as Associate Editor at Inside the EPA and contributes original reporting on product liability lawsuits, regulatory failures, and nationwide litigation trends.



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