Mesothelioma & Asbestos Lawsuits (2026): Claims & Status

Mesothelioma is a rare, aggressive cancer that federal health agencies link to asbestos exposure, and asbestos has driven the longest-running mass tort in United States history. As of June 2026, people diagnosed with asbestos-related disease continue to pursue claims through individual lawsuits and through court-supervised asbestos bankruptcy trusts.
This page is part of our Mass Tort & Product Liability overview.
What asbestos is and the alleged harm
Asbestos is a group of naturally occurring mineral fibers that were used for decades in insulation, fireproofing, construction materials, automotive parts, and shipbuilding because they resist heat and corrosion. When asbestos-containing materials are disturbed, microscopic fibers can become airborne and be inhaled. According to the National Cancer Institute, inhaled fibers may become trapped in the lungs and remain there for a long time, accumulating and causing scarring and inflammation. The injuries most commonly associated with asbestos are mesothelioma, a cancer of the thin membranes lining the chest and abdomen, along with lung cancer, asbestosis, and noncancerous conditions such as pleural plaques. Lawsuits generally allege that manufacturers and employers knew of these dangers yet continued to expose workers and the public, and that this exposure caused the claimant's disease.
Note: Nothing on this page is a finding that asbestos caused any specific person's illness. Whether a particular diagnosis is linked to a particular exposure depends on medical and case-specific facts that a doctor and an attorney would evaluate.
What the science and regulators say
The scientific and regulatory record on asbestos is unusually well established compared with newer torts. The National Cancer Institute states that asbestos has been classified as a known human carcinogen by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the International Agency for Research on Cancer, and that there is sufficient evidence that asbestos causes mesothelioma and cancers of the lung, larynx, and ovary. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry and the CDC similarly identify asbestos as a cause of mesothelioma and asbestosis. A key feature of these diseases is latency: NCI notes that it can take 10 to 40 years or more for symptoms to appear, which is why people are still being diagnosed decades after exposures that occurred in the twentieth century. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulates workplace asbestos exposure through permissible exposure limits and protective standards.

The status of asbestos litigation (as of June 2026)
Asbestos litigation does not look like a typical modern mass tort. Rather than one consolidated multidistrict litigation with bellwether trials and a global settlement on the horizon, asbestos claims today move through two main channels. First, individual personal-injury and wrongful-death suits are filed in state courts across the country, where many of the largest verdicts have occurred. Second, because roughly 100 companies have filed for bankruptcy at least partly due to asbestos liability, claimants frequently recover from asbestos bankruptcy trusts. Under Section 524(g) of the Bankruptcy Code, a reorganizing company can channel its asbestos liabilities into a trust that pays present and future claimants. The Government Accountability Office reported in 2011 that about 60 such trusts had been established with roughly 37 billion dollars in total assets, paying about 3.3 million claims worth about 17.5 billion dollars from 1988 through 2010, and that the totals have continued to grow since. A historical federal docket, In re Asbestos Products Liability Litigation (No. VI), MDL 875 in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, was created by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation in 1991 and has processed tens of thousands of asbestos cases over the decades under a one-plaintiff, one-claim approach, with several thousand still on its docket.
Note: Litigation and trust status change. Trust payment percentages, eligibility criteria, and individual state-court dockets are updated regularly, so the figures above reflect the cited records rather than a current account balance.
Regulatory and timeline background
The United States restricted but did not fully ban asbestos for most of its modern history. OSHA set workplace exposure standards beginning in the 1970s, and the EPA took a series of actions to limit specific uses. A central recent development came in March 2024, when the EPA finalized a rule banning the ongoing uses of chrysotile asbestos, the only form still imported into or used in the country at that time; as of mid-2026, however, that rule is under EPA reconsideration and challenge in the Fifth Circuit. The rule phases out asbestos in chlor-alkali industry diaphragms, certain brake products and gaskets, and other applications over staggered compliance deadlines. The EPA described the action as a step to protect people from lung cancer, mesothelioma, ovarian cancer, laryngeal cancer, and other health problems. Older buildings, products, and job sites may still contain legacy asbestos installed before these rules took effect.
Who may be involved
The people most often associated with asbestos disease are those exposed on the job. The National Cancer Institute identifies occupational settings such as mining, manufacturing, construction, shipbuilding, and automotive repair. Military veterans, particularly those who served aboard Navy ships or worked in shipyards, are also frequently affected because asbestos was widely used in vessels and bases. A distinct category is secondary, or household, exposure, where family members inhaled fibers carried home on a worker's clothing, hair, or tools. Because of the long latency period, a person may not connect a current diagnosis to an exposure that happened many years earlier. These are general categories only, and being in one does not establish that any individual has a claim.

Deadlines and why they matter
There is no single national deadline for an asbestos claim. Each state sets its own statute of limitations for personal-injury and wrongful-death actions, and the time allowed varies. For latent diseases like mesothelioma, many states apply a discovery rule, meaning the clock often starts at diagnosis rather than at the time of exposure. Wrongful-death claims brought by surviving family members typically run from the date of death and follow different timing. Asbestos bankruptcy trusts also impose their own claim-filing procedures and deadlines that operate separately from court lawsuits. Because these periods can be short and fact-specific, it is important not to assume any particular window applies to your situation.
How to evaluate your options
If you or a loved one has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or another condition that may be linked to asbestos, the most reliable step is to speak with a licensed attorney who handles asbestos cases. Whether you may have a claim depends on the specific facts, including the diagnosis, the likely sources and dates of exposure, and your state's deadlines. It helps to gather what you can: medical records and the diagnosis, your work history and job sites, any military service records, names of products or employers, and the timeline of when and where exposure may have occurred. Most attorneys who handle these cases offer a free, no-obligation consultation and work on a contingency basis, meaning they are paid only out of any recovery.

Harmed by a product or exposure? Speak with an attorney about your options
If you or a loved one may have been harmed, you can speak with an attorney about your legal options at no cost. Whether you have a claim depends on the specific facts. This is attorney advertising, not a guarantee that you qualify or of any particular outcome.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the asbestos and mesothelioma lawsuit about?
These cases allege that companies exposed workers and the public to asbestos despite knowing it could cause mesothelioma and other diseases, and that the exposure caused the claimant's illness. Federal health agencies classify asbestos as a known human carcinogen.
Is there a mesothelioma settlement?
There is no single nationwide settlement. Asbestos claims are resolved through individual state-court suits and verdicts and through roughly 60 court-supervised bankruptcy trusts that pay present and future claimants. Outcomes vary widely by case.
Who qualifies to file an asbestos claim?
There is no automatic eligibility. Whether a person may have a claim depends on the specific facts, including a qualifying diagnosis, evidence of asbestos exposure, and the applicable state deadline. A licensed attorney can review the details.
How much are mesothelioma cases worth?
There is no guaranteed amount. Recoveries depend on the diagnosis, the exposure history, the responsible companies, whether payment comes from a trust or a lawsuit, and state law. Past results do not predict any future outcome.
Is there a deadline to file?
Yes, and it varies by state. Statutes of limitations for asbestos disease often run from the date of diagnosis under a discovery rule, and wrongful-death deadlines run from the date of death. Bankruptcy trusts have separate filing rules. Do not assume any single deadline applies to you.
Can I still file if the company that exposed me went bankrupt?
Often yes. Many asbestos manufacturers established Section 524(g) bankruptcy trusts specifically to compensate current and future claimants after reorganizing. An attorney can help identify which trusts and which solvent defendants may apply to a given exposure history.
Do I have to pay upfront?
Most attorneys who handle asbestos cases work on contingency, meaning there is no upfront fee and they are paid only out of any recovery. Consultations are typically free and create no obligation.
Is asbestos banned in the United States now?
In March 2024 the EPA finalized a ban on the remaining ongoing uses of chrysotile asbestos, phased in over staggered deadlines, but as of mid-2026 that rule is under reconsideration and Fifth Circuit review. Legacy asbestos installed in older buildings and products before that rule may still be present.
Sources and References
- National Cancer Institute, Asbestos Exposure and Cancer Risk fact sheet (asbestos classified as a known human carcinogen; sufficient evidence it causes mesothelioma and cancers of the lung, larynx, and ovary; 10-to-40-year-plus latency)(cancer.gov).gov
- U.S. EPA, news release on the final rule banning ongoing uses of chrysotile asbestos (March 2024)(epa.gov).gov
- U.S. EPA, Risk Management for Asbestos, Part 1: Chrysotile Asbestos (scope and compliance timeline of the 2024 rule)(epa.gov).gov
- U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO-11-819, Asbestos Injury Compensation: The Role and Administration of Asbestos Trusts (about 60 Section 524(g) trusts, roughly $37 billion in assets, 3.3 million claims paid 1988-2010)(gao.gov).gov
- U.S. District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania, In re Asbestos Products Liability Litigation (No. VI), MDL 875 (transferred by the JPML in 1991; 40-to-50-year disease latency)(uscourts.gov).gov
- Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR/CDC), Asbestos and Your Health (asbestos definition, exposure sources, and links to serious and sometimes fatal disease including mesothelioma)(cdc.gov).gov
- U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, 29 CFR 1910.1001 asbestos standard (permissible exposure limit of 0.1 fiber per cubic centimeter, 8-hour time-weighted average)(osha.gov).gov
- U.S. House Report 113-254 (FACT Act of 2013), describing asbestos bankruptcy trusts and the Section 524(g) channeling-injunction mechanism(congress.gov).gov