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Blue Cross Blue Shield Settlement Payouts Start in May — Who Gets Money From the $2.67 Billion Fund
6 May 2026
2 mins read

Blue Cross Blue Shield $2.67 Billion Settlement Payments Are Starting: Who Gets Paid Now

NEW YORK, May 6, 2026, 14:08 (EDT)

Blue Cross Blue Shield settlement payments are set to begin this month for people and businesses with valid claims in a $2.67 billion subscriber antitrust settlement, moving the long-running case into its payout phase after all appeals were resolved. The settlement administrator said initial distributions to eligible Damages Class members will begin in May 2026.

The timing matters because millions of former and current Blue Cross Blue Shield customers have been waiting years for cash from a case first filed over claims that Blue plans limited competition in health insurance markets. About 6 million claims were filed, with reported average payouts estimated around $333, though the exact amount will vary.

The case also matters beyond checks. The settlement combines cash payments with business-practice changes that plaintiffs say should widen competition among Blue Cross Blue Shield plans, a point of sensitivity in a U.S. health insurance market where local concentration remains high. The companies denied wrongdoing and said their conduct lowered healthcare costs and expanded access.

Eligible claimants generally include individuals, insured groups and employees covered by certain Blue Cross or Blue Shield health insurance or administrative-services plans from Feb. 7, 2008, through Oct. 16, 2020. Self-funded accounts and their employees have a shorter class period, from Sept. 1, 2015, through Oct. 16, 2020. Government accounts are excluded, and dependents and beneficiaries are not eligible to receive cash payments.

The net settlement fund is estimated at about $1.9 billion after attorneys’ fees, administration expenses and other costs are deducted from the $2.67 billion fund. The administrator says $1.78 billion is set aside for individuals, insured groups and employees, while $120 million is earmarked for self-funded accounts and employees.

Payouts will not be uniform. The administrator says amounts depend on factors including the number of valid claims, premiums paid during the class period and whether coverage was fully insured or self-funded. Claims worth $5 or less will not be paid.

There is a catch for latecomers: the filing deadline was Nov. 5, 2021. People who did nothing remain bound by the settlement but will not receive a payment, according to the settlement FAQ.

Claim notices are being sent on a rolling basis by email and postcard. The administrator says claimants who agree with the premium or fee data in their notice do not need to do anything further, while those who dispute the data must submit supporting documents through the process described in the notice.

Payments can be made by electronic debit card if claimants choose that option through the notice. Otherwise, they will be paid through the method selected on the original claim form, the administrator said.

The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the final major legal barrier in June 2024 when it declined to hear challenges to the settlement and a related attorneys’ fee award. David Boies, one of the lead class attorneys, called the orders “a great result for consumers,” and said consumers would receive “billions of dollars of refunds.” Reuters

Plaintiffs had alleged that Blue Cross Blue Shield Association and member plans agreed not to compete with one another, raising costs for commercial and individual subscribers. Michael Hausfeld, a co-lead counsel for subscribers, said the case alleged the Blue system had operated as an “illegal association of competitors” trying to suppress competition; Blue Cross Blue Shield has denied the claims. Hausfeld

The competitive context is central. The American Medical Association said Blue Cross Blue Shield insurers collectively would hold a 43% commercial market share nationally, ahead of UnitedHealth Group, Elevance Health and CVS’s Aetna, and that a Blue insurer had the largest market share in 84% of metropolitan areas. The settlement case, however, centered on alleged restraints inside the Blue system, not claims against those peers.

A separate Blue Cross Blue Shield provider settlement is still part of the broader legal backdrop. In October 2024, Blue Cross agreed to pay $2.8 billion to resolve claims by hospitals, doctors and other providers alleging underpaid reimbursements; Blue Cross denied those allegations and said the deal would help put years of litigation behind it.

The main risk for claimants is expectation. The $333 figure is an estimate, not a guarantee, and the final payment depends on the administrator’s calculation, any disputes over premium data and the settlement’s minimum-payment cutoff. For many people, the notice will be more important than the headline number.

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