$2M Bell Ambulance Data Breach Class Action Settlement
Bell Ambulance has agreed to pay $2 million to settle a class action over a February 2025 cyberattack that exposed sensitive patient and employee data. If your information was compromised, you may be entitled to an estimated $90 flat cash payment with no documentation — or up to $5,000 for documented losses — plus two years of free medical identity monitoring.
Do I Qualify?
You may be eligible if:
- You are a U.S. resident whose private information was accessed in the February 2025 cyberattack on Bell Ambulance, Inc.
- Bell Ambulance is a private medical transport and ambulance service operating in Wisconsin and Illinois, affecting an estimated 114,000 patients and employees
- Compromised data reportedly included names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, driver's license numbers, financial information, medical diagnoses and treatment records, health insurance information, and full-face photographs
- You are included whether or not you received a direct notice from the company
- You submit a valid claim form by June 29, 2026
No proof is required for the ~$90 flat payment. You will need receipts, bills, or statements only if you are claiming documented losses up to $5,000. You cannot claim both the flat payment and documented losses for the same claim type.
File your claim on the official Bell Ambulance settlement website.
File Your Claim →What Happened?
In February 2025, Bell Ambulance, a private medical transport and ambulance service in Wisconsin and Illinois, discovered a targeted cyberattack on its systems. Files accessed reportedly included names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, driver's license numbers, financial information, medical diagnoses and treatment records, medical record numbers, health insurance information, and even full-face photographs.
The lawsuit, Whitaker et al. v. Bell Ambulance, Inc. (Case No. 2025CV002444, Circuit Court for Milwaukee County, Wisconsin), alleges Bell Ambulance could have prevented the breach with reasonable cybersecurity measures and failed to protect patients' and employees' sensitive data. Bell Ambulance denies wrongdoing but agreed to the $2 million settlement.
All U.S. residents whose information was potentially compromised are included in the settlement class, whether or not they received a direct notice from the company.
How Much Will I Actually Get?
The ~$90 flat payment is realistic for most affected people and requires no paperwork beyond the claim form itself. The up-to-$5,000 documented-loss tier needs actual receipts or statements tying specific costs to this breach — without that, the flat payment plus two years of free CyEx Medical Shield Complete monitoring (with up to $1 million in coverage) is the practical outcome.
Last reviewed: June 19, 2026 | Information verified from court records and official settlement documents.