Bard IVC Filter Lawsuit Settlement Calculator
MDL 2641 (D. Ariz.) — 11,467+ claims. Retrievable filters migrated, fractured, perforated — pulmonary embolism, cardiac tamponade, internal hemorrhage
Last reviewed: April 2026
⚖ MDL 2641 closed July 2024. First bellwether $3.6M. Highest individual $33M. State court claims may remain possible for some plaintiffs within SOL.
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Higher-tier injuries qualify for higher settlement tiers.
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$105,000 — $195,000
Mass tort settlements use injury-severity tiers. Most MDLs have published payment matrices — your tier depends on diagnosis + exposure proof.
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Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated
Bard IVC Filter MDL 2641 — Status 2026
MDL 2641 (District of Arizona) resolved approximately 11,467 lawsuits alleging Bard's retrievable IVC filters (G2, G2X, Eclipse, Meridian, Denali, Simon Nitinol, Recovery models) migrated, fractured, or perforated vessel walls — causing life-threatening complications: pulmonary embolism, cardiac tamponade, internal hemorrhage.
First bellwether verdict: $3.6 million for plaintiff. All subsequent trials settled confidentially before jury verdict. Bard ultimately settled ~8,600 cases through individual confidential agreements. Highest known verdict: $33M (outlier individual case). MDL formally closed July 2024.
For new filers in 2026: MDL is closed but state-court claims may still be viable in some jurisdictions if within statute of limitations (2-3 years from discovery of filter-caused injury). Discovery rule typically tolls SOL until plaintiff knew or should have known filter caused injury. Document the device lot, implantation date, complications, and revision surgery attempt.
Bard IVC Filter FAQs
Is it too late to file a Bard IVC filter lawsuit in 2026?
The MDL is closed, but individual state-court claims remain possible in some states if within SOL (typically 2-3 years from injury discovery). Consult a product liability attorney immediately — delay can be fatal.
What injuries qualify for a Bard IVC filter claim?
Migration, fracture, tilt, perforation of vessel walls, pulmonary embolism linked to filter failure, cardiac tamponade, internal hemorrhage, unsuccessful retrieval requiring complex removal.
Do I need the original device for my claim?
No. Medical imaging (CT, X-ray) and surgical records documenting the filter and complications are sufficient. Hospital records with device lot numbers + operative reports are key evidence.
What was the average settlement amount?
Settlement terms were confidential. Attorney estimates based on verdicts + comparable cases: low injury (migration, no surgery) $50K-$150K; moderate (fracture, retrieval surgery) $150K-$500K; severe (perforation, cardiac injury, death) $500K-$3.6M+.
How long does a state-court Bard IVC filter claim take?
Typically 1-3 years from filing to resolution. Individual state-court cases (post-MDL) tend to be faster than the MDL phase was, since defendant has less incentive to drag out non-MDL litigation.
Can family members file if the patient died?
Yes — wrongful death claims apply where IVC filter caused fatal complications. Statute of limitations runs from date of death (typically 2-3 years). See our Wrongful Death Calculator for state-specific rules.
Which Bard IVC filter models are covered?
All retrievable Bard models: G2, G2X, Eclipse, Meridian, Denali, Simon Nitinol, Recovery. Permanent filters (non-retrievable) are generally not in scope for this litigation.
What evidence does my lawyer need?
Operative report showing filter implantation (with lot number if available), medical imaging showing filter position/fracture/migration, subsequent imaging + treatment records, documentation of complications (PE, bleeding, cardiac events), any failed retrieval attempt records.