The $115 claim to file now
June 29, 2026 · 10:23 AM

The $115 claim to file now

This week’s settlement radar prioritizes low-friction claims you can still act on, led by AlbanyPark’s $115 cash option, Lands’ End data-breach benefits, Disney streaming, FLO app privacy, and a thin urgent-deadline lane.

This issue covers settlements surfaced between June 15, 2026 at 10:20 a.m. and June 29, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. in the channel's display timezone. The window is longer than usual because the prior scheduled issue found no qualifying new settlements.
The honest read: the urgent-deadline lane is thin. The only newly surfaced item inside the next 14 days is HelloWISP, and the research package flags it as notice-gated rather than a public, low-friction claim. The better use of time for most readers is to start with AlbanyPark's $115 cash option, then check whether Lands' End, Disney streaming, or FLO app eligibility applies.
Class action checks are often small, slow, or reduced pro rata. File only when you genuinely qualify, save your confirmation number, and treat the payment timeline as months rather than weeks.

Speed scan

SettlementDeadlineExpected payoutProof burdenBest fit
HelloWISP data privacyJuly 13, 2026$18 flatNotice/claim ID appears requiredOnly file if you received the Kroll notice 1
AlbanyPark discountsAugust 18, 2026$115 cash if you file, or $115 store credit automaticallyNo receipt; administrator uses purchase recordsAnyone who bought from AlbanyPark.com between June 2020 and October 2024 2
Nutricost magnesiumAugust 7, 2026Up to $19.95 per unitNo proof listedBuyers of covered Nutricost Magnesium Glycinate supplements from February 1, 2021 through June 8, 2026 3
Disney streaming antitrustSeptember 8, 2026Pro rata from a $50 million fundNo proof listed; official form details were not fully verifiedYouTube TV or DirecTV Stream subscribers from April 1, 2019 through March 31, 2026 4
Columbus Regional Health privacySeptember 19, 2026$25.50 flatNo proof listedPatients who registered for electronic records access between November 1, 2017 and June 30, 2022 3
FLO app data privacyOctober 15, 2026Pro rata from a $59.5 million fund; published maximums are much higher than likely actual payoutsSelf-attestation at the basic levelUS users who entered cycle, pregnancy, or ovulation information in the FLO app between November 2016 and February 2019 5
Lands' End data breachOctober 22, 2026$60 base cash, up to $5,000 documented losses, plus 24 months of credit monitoringNo proof for base cash; documentation for lossesUS residents whose private information was compromised in the December 2024 Lands' End incident 6

Closing soon: one urgent notice-only item

HelloWISP is the only new item in the closing-soon lane. It concerns data privacy claims tied to purchases from HelloWISP.com between February 1, 2018 and September 9, 2025, with a July 13, 2026 claim deadline and an $18 flat payment. The research package also flags the catch: public sources indicate class members need a claim ID from a settlement notice, so this is not a broad "go file now" opportunity for readers who did not receive an email or postcard. 1 7
If you received a Kroll notice, file before July 13. If you did not receive a notice, this one is probably not worth chasing. That is especially true because the payout is only $18 and the research package did not identify a clean public claim URL.

Four claims worth checking first

AlbanyPark discounts: the best value-to-effort claim

The AlbanyPark settlement is the first claim to check this week. The case, listed as the Chiechi Class Action Settlement, covers US purchasers who bought from AlbanyPark.com between June 2020 and October 2024. Eligible class members receive a $115 store credit automatically, but anyone who wants $115 cash instead must submit a claim form by August 18, 2026. 2
The five-minute value check is simple: did you buy furniture from AlbanyPark.com in that period, and did you receive a settlement notice? If yes, cash is better than store credit unless you already planned another AlbanyPark purchase. The administrator uses AlbanyPark purchase records, so the research package lists no receipt requirement for the $115 benefit. 2
Filing path: go to chiechiclassactionsettlement.com, enter the notice details requested by the form, and choose cash instead of the automatic store-credit option. The claim and opt-out deadline are both August 18, 2026. 2

Lands' End data breach: solid base cash, but likely notice-based

The Lands' End settlement covers US residents whose private information was compromised in the December 2024 Lands' End data incident. The official FAQ says compromised information included names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, driver's license or passport information, and in limited cases medical information. 6
The benefit structure is better than the typical small privacy settlement. Eligible class members can claim a $60 base cash payment without proof of loss, reimbursement of up to $5,000 for documented out-of-pocket losses, and 24 months of credit monitoring and identity-theft protection. The claim deadline is October 22, 2026; the opt-out and objection deadline is October 7, 2026; and the final approval hearing is scheduled for November 6, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. CT. 6 8
The practical catch is eligibility. The class is based on people whose information was compromised in the incident, and the claim form asks for notice information. Check email and mail first. If you have the notice, the base cash claim should be the low-friction path; use the documented-loss tier only if you have bank statements, credit-monitoring bills, or similar records.

Disney streaming antitrust: broad class, probably small check

The Disney streaming settlement is broad enough to be worth checking, but the expected individual payment may be modest. The case covers US consumers who paid for YouTube TV or DirecTV Stream live pay TV subscriptions between April 1, 2019 and March 31, 2026. The settlement fund is $50 million, and payments are pro rata rather than fixed per person. 3 4
This is a classic "file if easy, do not expect much" claim. The research package notes no proof requirement, but it also says the official settlement site was difficult to verify because the site returned an empty single-page-app shell during fetching. That means the deadline and fund are traceable through aggregators, while fine-grained form details should be checked directly when you file.
Filing path: go to onlinetvsettlement.com and follow the claim form. The deadline is September 8, 2026. 3

FLO app data privacy: high fund, sensitive eligibility

The FLO app settlement has the largest verified fund in this issue. The official settlement site says Google will pay $48 million, Flo will pay $8 million, and Flurry will pay $3.5 million, for a combined $59.5 million settlement fund. 5
Eligibility is specific. The class covers natural persons in the United States who used the FLO app between November 2016 and February 2019 and entered menstrual-cycle, pregnancy, or ovulation information into the app. People who previously excluded themselves from a prior Google settlement in this case are not eligible. 5
Published maximums are high: up to $2,500 from the Google fund, up to $200 from the Flo fund, and up to $30 from the Flurry fund. Actual payments will be calculated pro rata, so a realistic reader should expect less than the maximum if many valid claims are filed. The claim, opt-out, and objection deadline is October 15, 2026, and the final approval hearing is scheduled for October 29, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. PT. 5
Filing path: start at periodtrackerdataprivacylitigation.com/home and select "Submit a Claim." The basic eligibility path is self-attestation, but the research package could not verify the FAQ page because it returned 404.

Three quick wins

  1. Nutricost magnesium supplement claim. This one is worth a quick receipt-memory check if you buy supplements through Amazon, Walmart, or Nutricost.com. It covers purchases of Nutricost Magnesium Glycinate supplements in 240- or 120-capsule variants between February 1, 2021 and June 8, 2026. The settlement fund is listed at $1.835 million, the payout is up to $19.95 per unit, no proof is listed, and the deadline is August 7, 2026. 3 4 File at cohenmag.com if you qualify. 3
  2. Columbus Regional Health privacy claim. This settlement pays a flat $25.50 and covers current or former Columbus Regional Health patients who completed registration for electronic-records access between November 1, 2017 and June 30, 2022. The claim deadline is September 19, 2026, and no proof is listed for the flat payment. 3 File at columbusregionalsettlement.com if that patient-portal window fits you. 3
  3. Allina Health System pixel claim. This is a pro-rata claim from a $12.5 million settlement fund over alleged tracking pixels on Allina Health System websites. The class covers people who used Allina Health System websites between September 16, 2018 and May 11, 2026. No proof is listed, and the claim deadline is September 8, 2026. 3 9 File at allinapixelsettlement.com if you plausibly used those sites in the class period. 3

Skip or treat as notice-only

Bestway Spa Pump is not a five-minute claim for this audience. The settlement offers up to $75, but one path requires CPSC recall participation, cutting the pump cord, and submitting photos; the other path requires proof of purchase. The claim deadline is August 17, 2026. 10
New York Renaissance Faire ticket fees also stays out of the main list. The claim can pay up to $20 and the deadline is August 24, 2026, but the claim portal requires a unique ID and PIN from the settlement notice. 11 DATS is excluded because the research package classifies it as notice-only and too narrow for a national mass-market list. 12
Google+ and Google Search Referrer settlements are closed, not current opportunities. The research package identifies the Google+ deadline as October 8, 2020 and the Google Search Referrer deadline as July 31, 2023, so neither belongs in a 2026 filing list. 13 14
If you have only 15 minutes this week, use them in this order: AlbanyPark first, Lands' End if you have a notice, then Nutricost or Columbus Regional Health if either eligibility window fits your records. Disney and FLO are still worth checking, but pro-rata funds can shrink quickly when large classes file.
Cover image: AI-generated illustration.

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