Motility Data Breach Settlement 2026 -- Claim Up to $5,000 by August 7
By eosguide editorial · Last updated
Motility data breach settlement: claim up to $5,000, an estimated $75 cash, plus two years of free credit monitoring. File by August 7, 2026. Motility means the ability to move on its own. Your Social Security number took that a little too literally.
What happened
Class period: August 2025 (the month of the data incident)
- A cybersecurity incident at Motility Software Solutions, Inc. happened in August 2025.
- Unauthorized parties may have accessed or acquired private information, which may have included names, postal addresses, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, and driver's license numbers.
- A class action followed, and Motility agreed to a $4,949,500 settlement without admitting it did anything wrong.
- It affects individuals in the United States whose private information was caught in the incident.
What you can get
Documented losses (Cash Payment A)
Up to $5,000
With reasonable proof tied to the breach Alternate cash (Cash Payment B)
Key dates
| Action | Date | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Claim deadline | August 7, 2026 | Last day to file a claim |
| Opt out | August 7, 2026 | Keep your right to sue separately |
| Object | August 7, 2026 | Tell the court you disagree |
| Final hearing | August 14, 2026 at 1:30 p.m., before Judge Walter H. Rice in Dayton, Ohio | Judge decides whether to approve |
Who may qualify
- You reside in the United States
- Your private information was impacted in the August 2025 Motility Software Solutions data incident
- You received a notice about the breach, or otherwise meet the criteria on the official site
How to file
- Go to the official settlement website and click "Start Your Claim"
- Log in with the Unique ID and PIN printed on your Postcard Notice
- Complete the Claim Form online, or download a paper form and mail it postmarked by August 7, 2026
Filed this claim?
Save the claim ID, deadline, payout notes, and official link in the free Settlement Claim Tracker. It stores entries in your browser, with no account needed.
Add to Tracker →Want the next deadline before it sneaks past you?
Get weekly settlement alerts: new settlements, upcoming deadlines, and claim tips once a week.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
Proof required
- For documented losses: credit card or bank statements, invoices, telephone records, or receipts tied to the breach
- Personal statements alone are not enough but can support other proof
- For the $75 alternate cash: no documentation needed
- For credit monitoring: no documentation needed
Payment timing
Cash payments will be made after the Court grants final approval and the Settlement becomes final. Amounts may move up or down on a pro rata basis depending on how many valid claims are filed.
Important links
Contact
Extra details
- You can claim two years of credit monitoring on top of either cash option, not instead of it.
- If your actual losses were under $75, the alternate cash is the simpler pick.
- The fund pays for credit monitoring first, then Payment A, then Payment B, so the $75 estimate can shift.
- Lost your Unique ID or PIN? Call the administrator for a replacement. File only through the official site.
FAQ
Who qualifies for the Motility settlement?
How much can I get?
What is the difference between Cash Payment A and Cash Payment B?
Can I get credit monitoring and a cash payment?
What is the deadline to file?
When will I get paid?
Info only. Verify details on the official site. Not legal, financial, or tax advice. Legal
Related guides
Oak View Group 2023 data breach settlement
A November 2023 cyberattack on Oak View Group exposed Social Security numbers, birth dates, and driver's license numbers…
Krispy Kreme data breach settlement
A data incident discovered in November 2024 exposed names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, and financial accoun…
Cardiovascular Consultants data breach settlement
Your cardiologist kept your heart healthy -- less so your Social Security number. CVC's 2023 data breach exposed names, …
Share this: