Join thousands of Californians holding corporations accountable. Our attorneys are actively recruiting clients for the major class actions below. Consultations are free and there are no upfront fees.
Class actions allow individuals to join together when they’ve been harmed by the same company or product. If you or a loved one has been affected by any of the cases below, our attorneys can evaluate your claim at no cost. We only get paid if you win.
Active Cases
Major Class Actions Accepting Clients in California
Families and young adults harmed by social media platforms are joining consolidated federal and California lawsuits, with bellwether trials beginning in 2025–2026.
One of the largest toxic exposure cases in U.S. history. Plaintiffs who developed cancer after exposure to glyphosate herbicide (Roundup) continue to be recruited.
PFAS chemicals persist in the body and environment for decades. People exposed via contaminated drinking water who developed serious illnesses may qualify.
Women injured when the Paragard IUD broke during removal, requiring surgery and suffering fertility complications, are still being signed by law firms nationwide.
Law firms are investigating sudden vision loss and NAION (optic nerve damage) linked to GLP-1 medications. A new but heavily active area of litigation.
Individuals assaulted by rideshare drivers during rides, who reported the incident to Uber/Lyft or police, are part of nationally consolidated cases with many CA plaintiffs.
Parents of minors with severe gaming addiction are filing claims against developers for psychological harm, lost educational opportunities, and addictive design features.
If your personal data was exposed in a healthcare, financial, or telecom breach, you may qualify. Law firms are constantly recruiting plaintiffs from major recent breaches.
Men named, photographed, or falsely accused on the Tea app without consent are pursuing defamation, privacy, and doxxing claims against the platform and its operator. California residents with screenshots of false posts may have strong claims.
Men named, photographed, or falsely accused on the Tea app without consent are pursuing defamation, privacy, and doxxing claims against the platform and its operator. California residents with screenshots of false posts may have strong claims.