Apple’s $250M Siri AI Settlement: iPhone Owners Could Get Up to $95Β 

GigaNectar Team

Updated on:

iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max in four titanium finishes: black, white, blue, and natural, displayed against a dark background.
πŸ’° Class Action Settlement

Apple’s $250 Million Siri AI Settlement:
Who Gets Paid & What Happens Next

Apple has agreed to pay $250 million to settle a U.S. class-action lawsuit over the Siri AI features it advertised heavily β€” and then delayed. Eligible iPhone owners in the United States could receive between $25 and $95 per device. The proposed settlement was filed on May 5, 2026 and awaits final court approval. Read our related coverage on AI infrastructure and how major tech companies are navigating the AI race.
$250M
Total Settlement Fund
36M+
Eligible Devices
$25–$95
Per-Device Payout
7
iPhone Models Covered

πŸ“‹ What Apple Is Accused Of

At its Worldwide Developers Conference in June 2024, Apple previewed a rebuilt Siri powered by its Apple Intelligence system. The pitch was a personal assistant that would understand context from emails and calendar, see what was on screen, and carry out multi-step tasks across apps. Apple placed those promises front and centre in its iPhone 16 marketing when the phone launched in September 2024, including a television advert featuring actor Bella Ramsey.

The features did not arrive. In March 2025, Apple delayed the personalised Siri and quietly pulled the adverts. The lawsuit, Landsheft v. Apple Inc., was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California by the Clarkson Law Firm in March 2025. Plaintiffs argued that Apple had marketed features that did not yet exist, leading people to buy iPhones on a false promise, breaking California’s consumer protection and false advertising laws. See our coverage of AI regulation and how lawmakers are responding to the rapid pace of AI development.

Apple Siri AI announcement at WWDC 2024
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
β€” Plaintiffs’ lawyers, Clarkson Law Firm

βœ… Who Can Claim & How Much

The settlement covers U.S. residents who purchased one of these models between June 10, 2024 and March 29, 2025:

πŸ” Check Your Eligibility
Select your iPhone model and purchase date to see if you qualify.

Each valid claim pays $25 per device β€” that figure can rise to as much as $95 per device if fewer people claim than expected. Claimants will need proof of purchase, the device serial number, and their Apple Account details. You do not need to still own the phone to file.

Important: This is a United States payout only. If you bought your iPhone outside the U.S., you are not part of this settlement.

iPhone 16 and iPhone 15 Pro models eligible for settlement

πŸ“… Key Timeline

June 10, 2024
Apple previews new Siri capabilities at WWDC 2024 β€” personal context, on-screen awareness, per-app controls.
September 2024
iPhone 16 launches with advertising featuring the promised Siri AI features, including a TV commercial with Bella Ramsey.
March 2025
Apple delays personalised Siri and pulls related adverts. Lawsuit Landsheft v. Apple Inc. filed in the Northern District of California.
May 5, 2026
Apple agrees to $250 million settlement; plaintiffs file for preliminary approval.
June 17, 2026
Preliminary approval hearing before Judge Noel Wise in San Jose, California.
Late 2026 / Early 2027
If approved, payouts expected to begin β€” eligible buyers notified by email within ~45 days of final approval.

βš–οΈ Two Siri Lawsuits: What’s the Difference?

Siri AI False Advertising (This Case) Siri Privacy Case
Settlement Amount $250 million $95 million
Per-Device Payout $25 – $95 ~$20
Allegation False advertising of AI features that didn’t exist Siri recorded users without consent
Eligible Devices iPhone 15 Pro, 15 Pro Max, all iPhone 16 models Various Siri-enabled devices
Purchase Period June 10, 2024 – March 29, 2025 September 2014 – December 2024

Source: Court documents and public settlement filings.

🏒 Apple’s Position

Apple denies any wrongdoing. A company spokesperson said Apple settled “to stay focused on doing what we do best, delivering the most innovative products and services to our users”, and pointed to the many Apple Intelligence features it has shipped since 2024.

The company has also emphasised that it has “introduced dozens of features” since launching Apple Intelligence, such as Visual Intelligence and Live Translations. Read about Apple’s $30 billion Broadcom chip deal and its push into U.S. manufacturing.

Apple Intelligence and AI features rollout

⏳ What Happens Now

As of July 2026, the California court has held a hearing on preliminary approval, but the judge has not yet issued a final ruling. If the settlement is approved, eligible buyers in the U.S. would be notified by email within about 45 days, and payouts are unlikely to begin before late 2026 or early 2027.

A settlement website with an online claims form is expected to go live in the coming months. Even if you are not notified but are a U.S. resident who purchased one of the eligible iPhone models within the specified dates, you should still be eligible.

πŸ€– The Siri That Was Sued Over Is Finally Here

At WWDC 2026, Apple introduced “Siri AI” β€” now partly powered by a custom version of Google’s Gemini model, a deal reported in January 2026. Apple’s announcement confirmed it arrives with iOS 27, available for the iPhone 15 Pro and newer, with the revamped assistant already available to test on the iOS 27 developer beta. Check out our guide to Android Auto sideloading for more on in-car tech.

πŸ“Œ What This Means for You

The proposed settlement, filed on May 5, 2026, covers U.S. residents who purchased an iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro Max, or any iPhone 16 model between June 10, 2024 and March 29, 2025. Each eligible claim pays $25 per device, with the potential to rise to $95 if fewer claims are filed. The case remains pending final court approval, with a preliminary approval hearing scheduled for June 17, 2026. If approved, payouts are expected to begin in late 2026 or early 2027. For more context on the AI industry landscape, see our coverage of OpenAI and Anthropic’s IPO filings and the evolving AI market.

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