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    Home » $7.4 Million Trader Joe’s Settlement: Are You Owed Up to $102 From Your 2019 Grocery Runs?
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    $7.4 Million Trader Joe’s Settlement: Are You Owed Up to $102 From Your 2019 Grocery Runs?

    Megan BurrowsBy Megan BurrowsApril 22, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    $7.4 million trader joe's settlement
    $7.4 million Trader Joe’s settlement

    A receipt was the first step. Not a corporate scandal, not a data breach, not a product recall. A Trader Joe’s customer in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, took a closer look at a piece of paper that was about the size of a bookmark than most people. The plaintiff in what turned out to be a protracted class action lawsuit, Brian Keim, discovered something on his receipt that millions of other consumers had likely looked at and thrown away: ten digits of his card number. the final four and the first six. That is four more digits than companies are legally allowed to print under the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA), a 2003 amendment to the Fair Credit Reporting Act. There is a rationale behind the restriction, and the maximum allowed is five—more precisely, the final five. Regulators considered it safe to leave a card sitting in a grocery bag or, more realistically, crumpled at the bottom of one, but displaying both the issuer identification number at the front and the account identifier at the back gives a more complete picture of the card.

    In order to resolve the lawsuit, Trader Joe’s, which has more than 570 locations across 42 states and has developed one of the most devoted customer bases in American retail, has agreed to pay $7.4 million. The settlement was approved by the court in February 2026, and if the final approval hearing on August 10 goes well, each eligible class member who submits a legitimate claim will receive an estimated payment of about $102.45. The filing deadline is June 9, 2026. You may be one of the hundreds of thousands of customers covered by the settlement if you made credit or debit card purchases at Trader Joe’s during a particular five-month period in 2019—between March 5 and July 19 of that year—but there is a crucial requirement.

    CategoryDetails
    Case NameKeim v. Trader Joe’s Company
    CourtU.S. District Court, Central District of California
    Law InvolvedFair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA)
    ViolationReceipts printed first 6 + last 4 digits (10 total), exceeding the 5-digit legal limit
    Total Settlement Fund$7.4 million
    Estimated Payout~$102.45 per eligible claim (may vary)
    Eligible PeriodMarch 5, 2019 – July 19, 2019
    Eligibility CriteriaCredit/debit card purchase at Trader Joe’s with a non-compliant receipt
    Claim DeadlineJune 9, 2026
    Final Hearing DateAugust 10, 2026
    Claim WebsiteClassAction.org — Trader Joe’s Settlement

    Not all Trader Joe’s locations printed the non-compliant receipts, and even in those that did, not every transaction resulted in one. Receiving a receipt during the class period does not automatically make someone a member of the settlement class, as the settlement administrator has made clear. Only a small percentage of transactions at those locations used the problematic format, and the impacted receipts were produced by particular payment processing software at particular locations. This subtlety is important because it influences the number of legitimate claims that will eventually be filed, which in turn influences the amount that each claimant receives. The estimated $102.45 figure is merely an estimate and could change depending on overall participation. A Claim ID and PIN are already in the possession of those who received an email or postcard notification about the settlement, which strongly implies that their transaction records belong to the affected category.

    As is nearly always the case in class action settlements, Trader Joe’s has adamantly denied any misconduct throughout this process. The chain asserts that only a small portion of its transactions during the period were impacted by the receipt formatting issue and that no identity theft occurred as a result, a claim that is practically impossible to refute in either direction. According to the settlement website, the company’s insurer decided to settle after concluding that additional litigation would be “protracted and expensive.” It’s important to note that phrase. It doesn’t imply that the business lost or that it anticipated losing. It indicates that someone calculated the costs and determined that $7.4 million plus legal fees was less expensive and disruptive than years of ongoing litigation over what the company believes to be a technical violation that resulted in no documented harm. It’s another matter entirely whether anyone who is concerned about privacy law finds satisfaction in that computation.

    Beyond the mechanics, the company’s identity is what makes this settlement culturally intriguing. Because the stores are purposefully small, the products are frequently exclusive to the chain, the employees are trained to be aggressively friendly, and the brand generates the kind of enthusiasm that most grocery chains do not, Trader Joe’s has a unique relationship with its customers. People are fond of Trader Joe’s. A lawsuit against it would land differently than one against a faceless conglomerate because it holds an almost affectionate place in American consumer culture. Many customers who could be eligible for a payout might not file, either because they are unaware of it or because they don’t think the amount is worth the trouble of locating card transaction records from five years ago. That would make sense. However, the filing process is not particularly difficult; claims can be submitted by phone, mail, or at TJ-FACTASettlement.com. If you don’t have a Claim ID, you can submit your claim by mail using the first six and last four numbers of your card and a transaction date.

    The case serves as a subtle but unmistakable reminder that financial information privacy laws have serious consequences, even in cases where the infraction appears to be technical. Because receipts were showing too much information in too many locations where too many people could see it, they had turned into a transmission vector for card fraud, which is why FACTA was passed. According to Keim’s complaint, the store employee who gave him the receipt also had access to his financial information. It’s simple to write that detail off as legalistic exaggeration. Additionally, it is accurate when read simply. Trader Joe’s is not required to acknowledge the settlement. However, the $7.4 million will be a tangible confirmation that the issue was worthwhile when it gets to the claimants’ accounts.

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    Megan Burrows
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    Political writer and commentator Megan Burrows is renowned for her keen insight, well-founded analysis, and talent for identifying the emotional undertones of British politics. Megan brings a unique combination of accuracy and compassion to her work, having worked in public affairs and policy research for ten years, with a background in strategic communications.

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