TransUnion $23 Million Settlement: Did You Receive a Check?
Nearly 485,000 consumers who disputed hard credit inquiries and received TransUnion's '502 Letter' were eligible for automatic payments of $20–$160.
Last reviewed: April 2026
Editorially Reviewed — Content reviewed for accuracy using published legal research, government data, and verified court records. See our methodology
Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated
What the Lawsuit Alleges
This page covers Norman v. Trans Union LLC (Case No. 2:18-cv-05225-GAM, E.D. Pennsylvania) — the dominant TransUnion settlement with active consumer interest, affecting ~485,000 class members. It is preferred over the narrower Ramirez OFAC case (8,185 people, reached the Supreme Court on standing) and the smaller Wilson trigger-leads case. Norman alleged TransUnion systematically failed to investigate disputes about unauthorized hard credit inquiries, instead sending a form '502 Letter' while taking no substantive action — violating the Fair Credit Reporting Act.
Case Details
U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania; Case No. 2:18-cv-05225-GAM; filed 2018; settlement preliminarily approved February 2025; final approval July 22, 2025.
Current Status
Who Is Affected & Can You Join?
U.S. consumers (including territories) who received a TransUnion '502 Letter' in response to a written dispute of a hard credit inquiry between December 5, 2016 and January 31, 2025. About 485,000 consumers qualified automatically without filing.
Is There a Payout?
Case Timeline
- 1
Class Action Filed (2018)
Duane E. Norman Sr. sued in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania alleging TransUnion failed to reasonably investigate his hard-inquiry dispute, sending a form '502 Letter' instead of contacting the creditor.
- 2
Class Certified (2022–2023)
The court certified a class of ~485,000 consumers who received the '502 Letter' between Dec 5, 2016 and Jan 31, 2025, confirming the practice was widespread.
- 3
Settlement & Preliminary Approval (Feb 2025)
TransUnion agreed to pay $23M and reform its dispute practices; preliminary approval was granted in February 2025 with notice to class members.
- 4
Claim Deadline & Final Approval (Jun–Jul 2025)
The claim deadline for higher payments was June 24, 2025; final approval was granted July 22, 2025. The fund also covers attorneys' fees, costs, and a service award.
- 5
Checks Mailed (Sep 2025)
About 51 days after final approval — mid-September 2025 — checks were mailed; class members confirmed amounts around $21–$22. The settlement is now closed to new claims.
Scam & Misinformation Warnings
Whenever a brand lawsuit goes viral, scam sites and bad actors follow. Watch for these red flags:
Phishing 'Unclaimed Payment' Emails
Scammers mimic administrator emails claiming you have an unclaimed check and ask you to 'verify' your SSN or bank account. The real administrator operates only via www.transuniondisputeclassaction.com, never unsolicited email links.
Fee Services After the Deadline
The claim deadline passed June 24, 2025. No third party can file a valid claim now. Companies charging to 'file your TransUnion claim' in 2026 are taking money for an impossible service.
Confusion With the 2025 TransUnion Data Breach
A separate TransUnion data breach was disclosed July 2025 (Herships v. TransUnion, affecting 4.4M people). Scammers conflate it with the Norman FCRA settlement — these are entirely separate cases.
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the TransUnion $23 million settlement about?
Norman v. TransUnion resolved claims that TransUnion violated the FCRA by failing to properly investigate hard-inquiry disputes — sending a form '502 Letter' and taking no substantive action instead of contacting creditors or removing disputed inquiries.
Can I still file a claim?
No. The deadline was June 24, 2025 and final approval came July 22, 2025. No new claims are accepted. If you believe you were eligible and didn't receive an automatic check, contact the administrator at www.transuniondisputeclassaction.com.
Who was eligible?
About 485,000 U.S. consumers who received TransUnion's '502 Letter' in response to a written hard-inquiry dispute between December 5, 2016 and January 31, 2025. No action was needed for the automatic minimum payment.
How much did class members receive?
Consumers who took no action received an automatic ~$20–$30; those who filed a claim documenting specific financial harm could receive up to $160. The exact automatic amount depended on the number of valid claims.
When were checks mailed?
About 51 days after the July 22, 2025 final approval — around mid-September 2025. Some members confirmed checks in the $21–$22 range.
Is the 2025 TransUnion data breach the same as this settlement?
No. The $23M Norman settlement concerns FCRA hard-inquiry disputes (2016–2025). A separate breach affecting 4.4M people was disclosed July 2025 (Herships v. TransUnion) and has no open settlement or claims process as of 2026.
What did TransUnion agree to change?
Besides paying $23M, TransUnion agreed to reform how it handles hard-inquiry disputes — conducting substantive investigations rather than sending form letters. This injunctive relief accompanied the monetary fund.
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.