Chobani Yogurt Lawsuit 2026: Phthalates & 'Natural Ingredients' Class Action
Federal lawsuit alleges plastic chemicals were found in Chobani Greek yogurt marketed as natural.
Last reviewed: April 2026
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Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated
What the Lawsuit Alleges
A proposed class action filed in April 2025 (Wysocki v. Chobani LLC) alleges that independent testing detected multiple phthalates — including DEHP, DEP and DBP — in Chobani's plain Greek yogurts. The suit claims Chobani's 'Only Natural Ingredients' marketing is false because phthalates are synthetic plastic chemicals linked to reproductive harm. It alleges violations of California consumer-protection laws on behalf of purchasers.
Case Details
U.S. District Court, Southern District of California. Case No. 3:25-cv-00907-JES-VET. Filed April 16, 2025.
Current Status
Who Is Affected & Can You Join?
Potential class members are consumers who purchased Chobani Nonfat Plain or Whole Milk Plain Greek Yogurt (initially in California, potentially other states) while the 'Only Natural Ingredients' labeling was used. No class has been formally certified.
Is There a Payout?
Case Timeline
- 1
Independent Testing Published
A research organization publishes results showing multiple phthalates detected in Chobani yogurt products.
- 2
Lawsuit Filed — April 2025
Wysocki v. Chobani LLC is filed in the Southern District of California alleging false advertising under California law.
- 3
Motion to Dismiss — Mid-2025
Chobani moves to dismiss the complaint; the court takes the motion under submission.
- 4
Partial Denial — Early 2026
The court partially denies Chobani's motion, allowing false-advertising claims tied to phthalate contamination to proceed.
- 5
Active Litigation — 2026
The case proceeds; no class-certification motion has been decided and no settlement talks are publicly known.
Scam & Misinformation Warnings
Whenever a brand lawsuit goes viral, scam sites and bad actors follow. Watch for these red flags:
Fake Claim Forms
No official claim form for the Chobani phthalates case exists — any website collecting your information to 'file a claim' is fraudulent.
'Guaranteed Payout' Promises
The lawsuit has not settled and may never settle; anyone guaranteeing you money from this case is lying.
Law-Firm Impersonation
Scammers may claim to represent plaintiffs' counsel and ask for personal or financial data — verify any contact through official court records (PACER).
Frequently Asked Questions
What exactly is Chobani being sued for?
The lawsuit alleges Chobani's 'Only Natural Ingredients' marketing is false because independent testing found several phthalate chemicals in its plain Greek yogurts. Phthalates are synthetic plastic compounds, not natural ingredients.
Which Chobani products are named?
The complaint specifically names Chobani Nonfat Plain Greek Yogurt and Chobani Whole Milk Plain Greek Yogurt.
Has the court dismissed the case?
No. The court partially denied Chobani's motion to dismiss, allowing the core false-advertising claims to continue. Some narrower claims may be subject to amendment.
Is there a settlement I can claim right now?
No. As of 2026 there is no settlement, no claim deadline and no compensation fund. The case is still in early litigation.
Are phthalates dangerous?
Phthalates are linked to endocrine disruption and reproductive harm, and some are classified as possible carcinogens, though debate continues over safe exposure levels from food.
How did phthalates get into yogurt?
The plaintiff alleges the chemicals likely migrated from plastic packaging or processing equipment — a known contamination pathway even for foods without intentionally added synthetic ingredients.
How long will this case take?
Federal consumer class actions typically take two to four years. Filed in April 2025 with class certification not yet sought, a resolution before 2027–2028 would be early.
Separate from this case: were you injured in the last 2 years?
Class-action payouts are fixed amounts through an administrator. A personal injury claim is a different case — and often worth far more. Free estimate, no obligation.