A grocery receipt was the first step. Not a dramatic hack, not a scandal, not a breach. A few too many digits of a customer’s credit card number were displayed on a slip of thermal paper that was printed at a Trader Joe’s in Florida in 2019.
Brian Keim was that client. What he saw on that receipt ultimately led to a $7.4 million class action settlement that may now protect thousands of consumers nationwide.
Although the complaint’s main point is rather technical, it is important. A particular provision of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, or FACTA, states that card transaction receipts may only show the final five digits of a card number. The first six and last four digits were allegedly displayed on Trader Joe’s receipts at some locations between March 5 and July 19, 2019. In total, that is ten digits. It is argued that this is sufficient to possibly help someone who is trying to commit identity theft.
Trader Joe’s has completely rejected that framing. The business disputes any misconduct, argues that not all stores print receipts in this manner, and notes that no customer has allegedly come forward to report identity theft related to this particular problem. It’s worth pausing to consider that final detail. The lawsuit was filed more than five years ago, and the chain of harm that FACTA is intended to stop doesn’t seem to have happened, at least not in any way that is documented.

Nevertheless, the settlement is in place. This is in part because you can file a claim under FACTA without having to prove identity theft. If there was a violation, it was the printing itself. Some people might find that to be a technicality. However, consumer protection laws frequently operate in this manner; the goal is deterrence rather than waiting for the harm to manifest.
After considering the expense and unpredictability of protracted litigation, Trader Joe’s insurer decided to pay the $7.4 million settlement rather than continue the legal battle. Nothing has been acknowledged by the company itself. The merits have not been decided by courts. This type of settlement, which occurs more frequently than most people realize, settles a conflict without naming a winner.
The estimated payout for qualified shoppers is approximately $102 per claim; this is neither life-altering nor insignificant. The scope of eligibility is more limited than it may appear. During that particular five-month period, you had to use a credit or debit card at one of the impacted Trader Joe’s locations, and your receipt had to show those extra numbers. You are not automatically eligible just because you shop at Trader Joe’s in 2019.
The claim submission deadline is June 9, 2026. Trader Joe’s has ten business days following approval to finance the settlement, and a final court hearing is set for August 10. If you think you might be eligible, most class members can check their status using a Class ID and PIN they should have received in the mail by visiting the settlement website and calling 1-888-444-7415.
Observing cases like this proceed through the legal system gives the impression that the lawyers stand to gain the most. It is anticipated that class counsel will request fees totaling approximately $2.47 million, or roughly one-third of the entire fund. For class action work, that is typical, and there is a significant amount of legal work involved. However, it does present the $102 per claimant in a particular light.
However, the fundamental issue is not insignificant. There is a purpose behind card data protection. In this instance, it’s genuinely unclear if a few extra printed digits actually put anyone in danger. It’s obvious that the law has requirements, someone saw that they weren’t being fulfilled, and a settlement was reached. Before the deadline expires, it might be worthwhile for anyone who was in the right Trader Joe’s at the right time in 2019 to check.

