Millions of Americans use their medical portals in a similar manner to how they check the weather: fast, carefree, and confident that the information they enter will remain confidential. When emails about a lawsuit settlement involving Allina Health started to appear in inboxes throughout Minnesota and beyond, many people did what most people do when they receive unexpected legal notices: they nearly deleted them.
Over the past few weeks, a straightforward and pressing question has been circulating through Facebook community groups and Reddit threads: is the Allina Pixel Settlement legitimate? In a nutshell, the answer is yes. Why that matters is explained in the longer response.
Formally known as Ahlers et al. v. Allina Health System, the case is a federal class action that was filed under Case No. 24-CV-3674 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota. U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson has given it preliminary approval. On September 24, 2026, there will be a final approval hearing. A phishing scheme wouldn’t fit that description. That is a real court case with a real judge and a settlement administrator appointed by the court.

The lawsuit focuses on tracking pixels, a topic that most patients never consider. These are small, undetectable bits of code that are incorporated into websites to log user clicks, searches, and actions. They are used by companies like Google and Meta to create advertising profiles. The complaint claims that Allina Health’s use of these tools in areas where patients were making appointments, paying bills, and using patient portals was problematic. According to reports, clicking through to check lab results or schedule a cardiology appointment was combined with identifying information, such as IP addresses, names, and dates of birth, and sent to external ad networks.
In April 2023, Allina Health revealed the problem, admitting that Google Analytics had been receiving protected health data from tracking pixels. The business claimed there was no proof of abuse and deleted the code. However, an estimated 2.5 million people were impacted by the exposure itself, which became the basis for legal claims.
There are two groups in the $12.5 million settlement fund. A fund of about $10.3 million is used by Group One, which consists of portal users, online bill-pay users, and online scheduling users who engaged with Allina’s digital systems between September 16, 2018, and May 11, 2026. Group Two draws from a separate fund of approximately $2.2 million to cover general website visitors who were patients but did not use those particular features. Individual payouts will be determined pro rata, which means that each check will be smaller the more legitimate claims are filed. In any case, filing is worthwhile.
As this specific case develops, it seems to fit into a broader trend in the healthcare sector. Particularly after 2020, hospitals and medical networks quickly developed digital infrastructure without always considering the privacy implications of the tools they were using from the tech industry. In e-commerce, pixel tracking was commonplace. Legally and morally, dropping it into a patient portal was a completely different story.
The actual notification system for anyone who received an email about this case from Atticus Administration is that email. The court has approved the settlement website, allinapixelsettlement.com. Although it makes sense that people thought the case might be a scam, the combination of an unknown administrator name, a lawsuit pertaining to pixels, and a monetary reward does sound a bit too convenient.
It’s worth taking five minutes to verify your eligibility and submit a claim before the deadline closes if you have made any significant use of Allina Health’s website since late 2018. Final approval hearings for fiction are not scheduled by courts.

