Sprouts FACTA Settlement: $5M Fund, Claims Due Aug. 5

At a glance
- Status
- Closing soon
- Defendant
- Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc.; SFM, LLC
- Settlement fund
- $5,000,000
- Claim deadline
- August 5, 2026
- No-proof cash option
- Yes — pro-rata share of the Net Cash Fund. Class members who already received written email notice with a Notice Number starting with 'P' file a Short-Form Claim Form under penalty of perjury with NO proof required.
- Estimated payout
- pro-rata share of the Net Cash Fund. Class members who already received written email notice with a Notice Number starting with 'P' file a Short-Form Claim Form under penalty of perjury with NO proof required.
- Administrator
- Atticus Administration LLC
- Official site
- www.settleinfo.com
- Court
- Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles
- Case number
- 22STCV26572 (consolidated with 23STCV08339), No. 22STCV26572 (consolidated with 23STCV08339)
Last verified July 16, 2026
Key dates
| Milestone | Date | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Claim deadline | August 5, 2026 | Last day to file for a payment |
| Opt-out (exclusion) deadline | April 7, 2026(passed) | Last day to leave the settlement and keep the right to sue |
| Objection deadline | None listed | Last day to object to the terms |
| Final approval hearing | November 19, 2026 | When the judge decides whether to approve the settlement |
| Expected payout | Not yet scheduled | Payments are not sent until after final approval and any appeals |
Where to file
Sprouts Farmers Market FACTA Receipt Settlement is administered by Atticus Administration LLC. The only place to file is the official settlement website:
File at the official sitewww.settleinfo.com
Filing is free. No legitimate settlement charges a fee to file a claim.
You cannot file on RecordingLaw.com. We are an independent publisher, not the settlement administrator, and we are not affiliated with any court, agency, or defendant.
The Sprouts Farmers Market FACTA receipt settlement is open, and the deadline to file a claim is August 5, 2026, just a few weeks away. This is not a data breach. It is a receipt-printing case: two consolidated lawsuits accuse Sprouts of printing more than the last five digits of customers' payment card numbers on printed store receipts, which is a violation of a federal law called FACTA.
A $5,000,000 non-reversionary cash fund is set aside to pay class members who file a valid claim. "Non-reversionary" means none of that money reverts to Sprouts; it all gets paid out to the class and to court-approved fees and costs. What any one person actually receives depends on how many people file, not on the size of the fund alone.
What Sprouts is accused of doing
Federal law, specifically the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA), requires businesses to truncate payment card information on electronically printed receipts. A merchant is allowed to print no more than the last five digits of a credit or debit card number, and the expiration date cannot appear at all.
Two lawsuits, later consolidated, accused Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc. and SFM, LLC of not doing that. Larry Tran v. Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc. (case number 22STCV26572) and Robert Cohen v. Sprouts (23STCV08339) were both filed in the Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles, and were later consolidated into a single case. The claims center on printed receipts that showed more than the truncated last five digits of a customer's card number.
Where the case stands right now, as of July 2026
This case has taken an unusually long road to a claims window. Filed back in 2022 and later consolidated, it went up to California's Court of Appeal, which remanded it back down specifically so the settlement-approval process could move forward. That detour is part of why a 2022 case only reached an open claims period in 2026.

Two dates have already passed. The deadline to exclude yourself from the class, meaning to opt out and keep your own separate right to sue Sprouts, was April 7, 2026, and that window is closed. A separate objection deadline is not stated in the verified record.
The claim deadline itself, August 5, 2026, is still open. Unusually, the final approval hearing, where a judge decides whether to sign off on the settlement, is not until November 19, 2026, months after the claim deadline. Claims are being collected before final court approval, and the record does not state an expected payout date, so there is no confirmed timeline yet for when money would reach class members.
Who's in the class
The class definition has two branches, one for card payments and one for EBT (electronic benefit transfer) payments, each with its own date range. You may be eligible if either of the following describes you:
You used a personal credit or debit card to make a purchase at any Sprouts Farmers Market store between August 16, 2020 and October 31, 2022, and the printed receipt you received showed more than the last five digits of your card number.
Or, you used an EBT card at a Sprouts store between March 15, 2021 and April 15, 2023, and the printed receipt showed more than the last five digits of your card number.
Simply having shopped at Sprouts during those years is not, on its own, enough. The claim turns on what your specific printed receipt showed. If you no longer have old receipts from that period, that does not necessarily rule you out. It depends on which claim path applies to you, covered below.
How much you might actually get
The settlement record does not state a fixed dollar figure per class member, and there is no stated maximum payout to point to here. What is confirmed is the structure: eligible class members who file a valid claim split a $5,000,000 non-reversionary cash fund on a pro-rata basis.
Your share depends on how many other people file valid claims and what the court approves in attorneys' fees and administrative costs, both of which come out of that same fund before it is divided. Treat $5,000,000 as the size of the pool, not as a number tied to any one person's check; a pro-rata fund like this one typically pays less per claimant than an even split of the headline figure would suggest.
What proof you need, and the one path that isn't automatic
This is easy to get wrong, because it is not the same for every class member. Sprouts and the administrator already sent written notice by email to some class members, and those notices carry a unique Notice Number. If your Notice Number begins with the letter "P," you can file a Short-Form Claim Form, signed under penalty of perjury, with no supporting documentation required.

If you did not receive that direct written notice, or your Notice Number does not begin with "P," a different claim path applies to you, and the verified record does not spell out exactly what that path requires. Do not assume it is automatically proof-free just because the Short-Form path is; check the claim form on the official settlement site for what applies to your situation.
How filing works
Filing is handled entirely by Atticus Administration LLC, the court-appointed settlement administrator, through the official settlement site; that link renders separately on this page. The claim deadline is August 5, 2026, and based on the notice terms, a claim is timely if it is submitted online or postmarked by that date.
If you already have a Notice Number starting with "P" from an email Sprouts or the administrator sent you, keep that number on hand; you will likely need it to complete the Short-Form Claim. If you believe you are a class member but never received a notice, you can still look into filing through the general claim process on the official site.
If you're not sure where you stand
The class definition depends on what your specific receipt printed, not just on having shopped at Sprouts. If you kept a printed Sprouts receipt from the covered years, check it now against the last-five-digits rule described above.

If you already opted out by the April 7, 2026 deadline, filing a claim is not available to you; opting out and filing a claim are mutually exclusive. If you did nothing by that date, you remain in the class and can still file by August 5, 2026, subject to whichever proof path applies to you.
For other open, verified settlements RecordingLaw is tracking, see the data breach and privacy settlement tracker.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Sprouts Farmers Market FACTA settlement?
It is a $5,000,000 class action settlement resolving two consolidated lawsuits, Larry Tran v. Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc. and Robert Cohen v. Sprouts, filed in the Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles. The suits alleged Sprouts printed more than the last five digits of customers' card numbers on receipts, in violation of the federal Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA). It is not a data breach case.
Am I eligible for the Sprouts settlement?
You may be eligible if you used a personal credit or debit card at a Sprouts store between August 16, 2020 and October 31, 2022, or an EBT card between March 15, 2021 and April 15, 2023, and the printed receipt you received showed more than the last five digits of the card number. The claim turns on what your specific receipt printed, not just on having shopped there.
How much is the Sprouts settlement payout?
The settlement record does not state a fixed per-person amount. Eligible class members who file a valid claim split a $5,000,000 non-reversionary fund on a pro-rata basis, so your share depends on how many valid claims are filed and what the court approves in fees and costs.
What is the deadline to file a Sprouts settlement claim?
As of July 2026, the claim deadline is August 5, 2026. The exclusion (opt-out) deadline, a separate date, was April 7, 2026, and has already passed.
Do I need proof to file a Sprouts settlement claim?
It depends which path applies to you. A Notice Number starting with 'P' lets you file a Short-Form Claim under penalty of perjury with no documentation required. Without that, a different claim path applies, and the verified record does not specify what documentation it requires.
Can I still opt out of the Sprouts settlement?
No. The deadline to exclude yourself from the class was April 7, 2026, and that window has closed. Opting out and filing a claim are two different, mutually exclusive choices, and only the claim option, due August 5, 2026, remains open.
When will Sprouts settlement payments arrive?
There is no confirmed payout date. The final approval hearing, where a judge decides whether to approve the settlement, is scheduled for November 19, 2026, which is after the August 5, 2026 claim deadline. The verified record does not state when payments would be issued after that hearing.
Is settleinfo.com the real Sprouts settlement website?
As of July 2026, settleinfo.com is the official court-approved claims site for this settlement, administered by Atticus Administration LLC. Go to that address directly rather than through a link in an unexpected email or text message.
How to tell a settlement notice is real
Check the case name, case number, and court against the official settlement site. Go to that site directly instead of clicking a link in an email or text. Nobody legitimate will call, text, or email out of the blue asking for your Social Security number, bank account, or card details, and nobody will charge you to file. Report anyone who does at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
Informational only. Not legal, tax, or financial advice, and not affiliated with any settlement.
RecordingLaw.com is an independent legal-information publisher. We are not a law firm, not a settlement administrator, and not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of any court, government agency, defendant, or claims administrator described on this page. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship.
We do not process claims and we never collect your claim information. You cannot file a claim on RecordingLaw.com. To file, opt out, object, or check your status, use only the official settlement administrator identified above. We link to it for your convenience.
Filing a legitimate claim is free. No legitimate settlement or administrator will charge you a fee to file, or ask for your Social Security number, bank, or card details by unsolicited call, text, or email. If someone does, it is likely a scam. Report it at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
Deadlines, amounts, and approval status change and are set by the court. We verify against the official administrator and court records, but confirm the current details on the official site before acting. Nothing here guarantees eligibility, a payment, or any amount. Settlement payments may be taxable. See IRS Publication 4345. and consult a tax professional. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state. Affiliate disclosure.
Sources and References
- FTC: Slip Showing? Federal Law Requires All Businesses to Truncate Credit Card Information on Receipts(ftc.gov).gov
- 15 U.S.C. § 1681c(g), Requirements Relating to Information Contained in Consumer Reports (card truncation requirement)(uscode.house.gov).gov
- Official Notice of Class Action Lawsuit and Settlement, Tran v. Sprouts Farmers Market, Inc. / Cohen v. Sprouts(settleinfo.com)
- Sprouts Farmers Market Settlement (Official Court-Approved Site, administered by Atticus Administration LLC)(settleinfo.com)