Apple’s $250M Siri Settlement Covers 36M iPhones — Lawyers Call It “One of the Largest False Advertising Cases”

GigaNectar Team

Interior of an Apple retail store displaying iPhone 16 products and promotional materials for Apple Intelligence features
Settlement · May 2026

Apple Agreed to Pay $250M Over AI Features That Were Advertised Before They Existed

Apple agreed on May 6, 2026 to pay $250 million to settle a consolidated class-action lawsuit that accused the company of falsely advertising Apple Intelligence — specifically a personalised, AI-powered version of Siri — as a feature that would be ready when the iPhone 16 shipped in September 2024. It was not. The settlement, which includes no admission of wrongdoing, covers roughly 36 million eligible devices sold in the US.

The case was filed by Clarkson Law Firm and consolidated in the US District Court for the Northern District of California. It still requires final court approval by Judge Noël Wise at a hearing set for June 17, 2026. The US advertising watchdog, the BBB’s National Advertising Division, had separately concluded that Apple’s unqualified “Available Now” claim on its Apple Intelligence webpage falsely conveyed that all listed features were immediately accessible to users.


The $250M Breakdown

Key figures from the settlement filed in California federal court.

$250M
Total settlement fund
~36M
Eligible devices covered
$25
Base payout per device
$95
Max payout per device (if low claims)

Which iPhones Are Covered?

Purchased in the US between June 10, 2024 and March 29, 2025.

📱
iPhone 16
Eligible
📱
iPhone 16 Plus
Eligible
📱
iPhone 16 Pro
Eligible
📱
iPhone 16 Pro Max
Eligible
📱
iPhone 16e
Eligible
📱
iPhone 15 Pro
Eligible
📱
iPhone 15 Pro Max
Eligible
🚫
iPhone 15 / 15 Plus
Not covered

To file a claim you will need proof of purchase, the device serial number, your Apple Account details, and your phone number. Claim submission information will be sent to eligible buyers within 45 days of May 6, 2026.


How Much Could You Get?

The actual per-device payout depends on total claims filed. Drag the slider to see estimated payouts at different participation rates.

Claims participation rate 50%
$60
Est. per-device payout
$120
Est. for 2 devices

Estimates are illustrative only, based on a $25–$95 range across 36 million devices. Final amounts are determined by the court-approved claims process. See the Clarkson Law Firm settlement page for official details.


Check Your Eligibility

Answer three quick questions to find out if you may qualify for a payout.

Q1 Did you purchase your iPhone in the United States?
Q2 Which iPhone model did you purchase?
Q3 When did you purchase the iPhone?


From Promise to Payout

A timeline of Apple Intelligence — from the WWDC stage to the federal courthouse.

🎤
June 10, 2024
Apple announces Apple Intelligence at WWDC 2024

At its annual Worldwide Developers Conference in Cupertino, Apple officially announces Apple Intelligence and a heavily upgraded Siri — capable of in-app actions, deep personal context, and onscreen awareness — as a centrepiece of iOS 18 and the upcoming iPhone 16.

📦
September 2024
iPhone 16 ships — without the promised Siri upgrade

The iPhone 16 goes on sale. Apple ships some Apple Intelligence features gradually, but the deeply personalised, AI-powered Siri shown in ads — including a commercial starring actor Bella Ramsey — is not present on the device.

⚠️
Late 2024
Notification summaries misfire; Apple disables the feature

Apple’s AI-powered notification summaries begin misrepresenting news headlines. Apple disables the feature after public criticism. Class-action lawsuits begin to be filed in US federal courts, accusing Apple of false advertising under consumer protection laws.

⏸️
March 2025
Apple delays enhanced Siri; pulls its own ads

Apple officially delays the release of its personalised Siri upgrade due to quality problems, and pulls the Apple Intelligence advertisements. The US District Court for the Northern District of California consolidates the related lawsuits into a single class action, which covers the purchase window of June 10, 2024 to March 29, 2025.

👤
December 2025
Apple’s AI chief retires; settlement agreement reached

John Giannandrea, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Machine Learning and AI Strategy, retires. Separately, Apple and plaintiffs reach a settlement agreement in December 2025, though terms are not publicly disclosed until May 2026.

🤝
Early 2026
Apple turns to Google Gemini for AI features

Apple announces it will use Google’s Gemini to help power its AI products, including Siri. This marks a significant shift for a company that had marketed Apple Intelligence as a native, on-device capability. The AI industry continues to move rapidly as Big Tech firms invest heavily in generative models.

⚖️
May 6, 2026
$250M settlement filed; preliminary approval granted

The $250 million settlement receives preliminary approval. Notices will be sent to eligible buyers within 45 days. A final approval hearing before Judge Noël Wise is scheduled for June 17, 2026 in the US District Court for the Northern District of California.


What Was Said

Statements from the parties involved, sourced from press releases, court filings, and official communications.

“Apple promoted AI capabilities that did not exist at the time, do not exist now, and will not exist for two or more years, if ever, all while marketing them as the breakthrough innovation.”

Plaintiffs’ lawyers · Consolidated class-action complaint

“We resolved this matter to stay focused on doing what we do best, delivering the most innovative products and services to our users.”

Marni Goldberg · Apple spokesperson statement

“While we disagree with the NAD’s findings related to features that are available to users now, we appreciate the opportunity to work with them and will follow their recommendations.”

Apple Inc. · Advertiser statement to BBB National Advertising Division, April 2025
who should feel confident and protected when deciding where to spend their hard-earned dollars. We are at an inflection point with AI, and the choices companies and regulators make now will shape how this technology impacts everyday people.”

Ryan Clarkson · Founder, Clarkson Law Firm

The $250 million settlement was covered here in the context of broader questions around consumer digital rights and corporate AI accountability. The court filing described a consolidated class of buyers who purchased Apple Intelligence-capable iPhones during the June 2024 to March 2025 window in the United States. Eligible devices include the full iPhone 16 range, the iPhone 16e, and the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max models.

Under the settlement terms, Apple made no admission of wrongdoing. Eligible claimants are expected to receive $25 per device, with amounts potentially reaching $95 per device depending on total claims filed. The settlement fund, described as non-reversionary, covers approximately 36 million devices. Final court approval is pending before Judge Noël Wise on June 17, 2026. The settlement’s details were publicly confirmed on May 6, 2026, with claim submission notices to follow within 45 days. For ongoing coverage of tech industry developments, see related technology stories at Giganectar.

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