If you received a notice that your personal information may have been compromised, you could be eligible to claim up to $5,000 from a $5.15 million settlement tied to a healthcare data breach.
The deadline to file the claim is November 25, 2025—after that you risk losing your chance entirely. It’s important to understand what the settlement covers, who is eligible, and how to act before time runs out.
What Happened: The Breach & Settlement
In September 2024, a major healthcare provider experienced a data breach that exposed sensitive personal and medical information of approximately 918,000 patients and employees.
The provider agreed to a $5.15 million class-action settlement and is offering two major payment options for eligible individuals.
This settlement includes both a documented-loss payment option and a flat payment option for those without proof of specific losses. To benefit, claimants must submit a valid form by November 25, 2025.
Key Settlement Facts
| Item | Detail | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Total settlement fund | $5.15 million | Sets the cap for all payments |
| Estimated affected individuals | ~ 918,000 patients & employees | Large pool of potential claimants |
| Claim deadline | November 25, 2025 | After this date you lose your eligibility |
| Maximum documented-loss payment | Up to $5,000 | If you can prove expenses or harm |
| Flat payment (no proof) | Around $100, possibly up to $350 | For those without documented losses |
| Monitoring service included | Two years of free identity/medical-data monitoring | Added benefit beyond cash compensation |
Who Is Eligible & What You Must Do
To qualify for the settlement, you must have received a notice from the healthcare provider stating your data may have been compromised. If so, you are a part of the class and can choose one of the payment options.
Payment choices:
- Choose the documented-loss option: Submit proof of out-of-pocket costs, identity theft, fraudulent charges, or credit-monitoring expenses. If accepted, you may receive up to $5,000.
- Choose the flat payment option: If you have no proof of quantifiable loss but belong to the class, you can receive approximately $100, with the possibility of increase to $350 if the number of claims is low and funds allow.
Key action steps:
- Submit the claim form online or via the method specified by the settlement administrator.
- Include required information: your notice of data exposure, any receipts or documentation (if choosing the documented-loss route).
- Submit before November 25, 2025 to be eligible.
- Decide whether you are choosing documented losses or flat payment — you cannot choose both.
- Retain copies of everything submitted and monitor your mail/e-mail for confirmation of receipt.
Why This Matters to You
This settlement is unusual because of several features:
- It involves a healthcare provider, meaning sensitive medical and personal data were exposed—higher risk category.
- It offers a significant maximum payout ($5,000) for documented losses.
- It has a firm deadline, meaning procrastination may cost you.
- It includes non-cash benefits (monitoring services) which add long-term value.
For many Americans, especially those already impacted by identity theft or medical-data misuse, this settlement is a rare chance to recoup losses and protect future risks.
If you were notified that your data may have been compromised in this breach, the window to act is closing.
The settlement offers up to $5,000 for documented losses—or a flat payment for others—and includes added protections like two years of monitoring. But the deadline is firm: your claim must be submitted by November 25, 2025.
Don’t let this opportunity slip away—take action now, gather your documents, and file your claim before it’s too late.
FAQs
I received an exposure notice but haven’t suffered identity theft—can I still claim?
Yes. If you received the notice and didn’t incur specific documented losses, you may choose the flat-payment option (around $100). You don’t need proof of theft to be eligible for the flat payment.
Can I switch from the flat payment option to the documented losses option later?
No. At the time of your claim you must select either the documented-loss route or the flat payment route. You cannot change your selection later.
What happens if I miss the November 25 deadline?
If your claim is not submitted by the deadline, you likely forfeit your right to any payment under this settlement. Late submissions are usually disallowed in class-action settlements of this type.




