Flo Period Tracker Privacy Settlement
Three companies — Flo Health, Google, and Flurry — are paying a combined $59.5 million to settle a federal class action lawsuit over how a popular period-tracking app handled your most sensitive health data. The Flo App, used by millions of American women to log menstrual cycles and track pregnancies, allegedly shared that intimate information with Google's and Flurry's advertising software development kits without users' knowledge or consent. That data sharing, which occurred between November 2016 and February 2019, allegedly violated federal and state privacy laws. The settlement funds — $48 million from Google, $8 million from Flo, and $3.5 million from Flurry — will be distributed as cash payments to eligible app users. No proof of purchase is required to file a claim.
Do I Qualify?
You may be eligible if:
- You are a U.S. resident who used the Flo App between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019
- You entered menstruation or pregnancy data in the app during that time
- California Subclass members (who also lived in California during that period) qualify for a double share of the settlement fund
- The opt-out deadline of July 20, 2025 has passed — class members can no longer exclude themselves
No proof is required. You attest under penalty of perjury that you used the Flo App and entered relevant data during the class period — no screenshots or documentation required.
File your claim through the official settlement website at periodtrackerdataprivacylitigation.com before October 15, 2026.
File Your Claim →What Happened?
The Flo App is a period and ovulation tracker allowing users to enter intimate health data including menstrual cycle dates, ovulation predictions, pregnancy tracking, and symptoms. Between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019, the app incorporated software development kits from Flurry, Google Firebase Analytics, and Meta.
Plaintiffs in Frasco et al. v. Flo Health Inc., et al., Case No. 3:21-cv-00757-JD, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, alleged those SDKs transmitted users' reproductive health data to Flurry and Google without adequate disclosure. All defendants denied wrongdoing.
A separate jury trial against Meta concluded August 1, 2025 with a verdict for plaintiffs — that verdict is distinct from this settlement.
How to File Your Claim
- Go to periodtrackerdataprivacylitigation.com/file-a-claim/
- Complete the online claim form with your name, email, mailing address, and confirmation you used the Flo App and entered menstruation or pregnancy data between November 1, 2016 and February 28, 2019
- Indicate whether you qualify for the California Subclass (double share)
- Submit electronically by 11:59 p.m. PT on October 15, 2026, or mail a paper form postmarked by that date
- Payments distribute after final approval (October 29, 2026) and resolution of any appeals
How Much Will I Actually Get?
Pro rata share of the $59.5 million fund — no fixed per-person amount; it depends on total claims filed. No proof of purchase required. California Subclass members receive double the share of nationwide class members. Non-reversionary fund.
Last reviewed: June 30, 2026 | Information verified from court records and official settlement documents.