It’s probably buried under newsletters and ads in your email inbox. It’s from someone or something called the “Facebook User Privacy Settlement Administrator.” It’s not spam, even though it looks like it might be. It’s possible that you will get a little more money soon if you cashed that small, slightly odd check last fall.
A second round of payments is being made from the historic $725 million Facebook privacy class action settlement. After finding out that about $100 million of the settlement fund had been left in accounts, untouched, and patiently waiting, a federal judge gave the order to distribute. That extra pool is now being redistributed. It will be sent to more than 15 million people who collected and used their first payment in batches over the next four weeks.
The case itself is called “In re: Facebook, Inc.” Consumer Privacy User Profile Litigation—comes from claims that Facebook, which is now known as Meta Platforms, gave user data to third parties without permission. Almost everyone in the US who had a Facebook account between May 2007 and December 2022 was in the class. That’s a big net. The main rule is that if you’ve used the platform in the last fifteen years, you probably qualified.
In September 2025, the first set of payments were sent out. The check that most people got was $32.45—not quite enough for retirement, but enough to be noticed. The second round will be less big. According to court records, the least amount was $4.67 and the most was $7.32. Most people will say something close to six dollars, since the range isn’t very big. When you see that number, you might want to shrug. However, it is important to keep in mind that millions of six-dollar payments add up to a lot, even if no one changes their mind.

This redistribution is a bit unusual because the recipients don’t have to do anything. Don’t fill out a second claim form or sign up again. The system already knows if you filed a claim before the deadline in August 2023, got paid, and then spent the money. People are getting paid by check, direct deposit, PayPal, Venmo, Zelle, or prepaid debit card, depending on which method they chose at the beginning. The person in charge of the settlement is sending emails a few days before each payment is due. This is likely why many people are just now reading messages they may have ignored last week.
Still not sure why a lot of people never claimed or cashed their first payment. Some people may have missed the first chance to file. Others may have gotten a check, put it somewhere safe, and then forgotten all about it. This happens more often than banks like to admit. No matter what the reason was, the money that wasn’t collected couldn’t just disappear. As part of the settlement, they had to go somewhere. The court decided that putting them back in the hands of people who had already shown they were paying attention made the most sense.
Meta, for its part, has said throughout the proceedings that it has not broken any laws. This is a common stance for companies in these kinds of settlements, where they end the lawsuit without admitting fault. That’s still the case after the agreement. This ends a part of a bigger, ongoing conversation about what platforms really owe their users when it comes to privacy and data. This kind of settlement won’t be the last one. If anything, seeing this case go through its first payout, its stack of uncashed checks, and now this quiet second wave shows that digital accountability works slowly, not perfectly, and in amounts that don’t always seem to match the original harm. It moves, though.

