This article provides general legal information, not legal advice. Settlement rights, deadlines, claim rules, and release language vary by case and sometimes by state. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. If you need advice about whether to file a claim, opt out, object, or preserve separate legal rights, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
The June 2026 class action settlement deadlines calendar has two urgent consumer deadlines on Tuesday, June 9, 2026: the MUBI auto-renewal settlement and the Trader Joe's FACTA receipt settlement. If you received a notice, used one of the services during the covered period, or are checking whether you may be entitled to submit a claim, this is the time to verify the official notice and act carefully.
Class action settlement notices can feel confusing because they mix legal rights with practical claim steps. Filing a claim may allow a payment, but it can also release claims. Opting out may preserve the right to sue separately, but it usually gives up settlement benefits. Doing nothing may still affect legal rights. That is why the official notice, not a social media post or third-party summary, should be the starting point.
This guide explains the June 9 deadlines in plain language, links to the official settlement administrator sites, and flags a few official June 15 deadlines to check next. It does not promise payment or say that any reader qualifies. Settlement administrators review claims, courts must approve many settlements before money is distributed, and the final payment amount may depend on the number of valid claims.
If you are also trying to organize a broader consumer claim or related legal concern, the Do I Qualify? assessment can help collect the basic facts for review. It is not a settlement claim form and does not decide eligibility for these settlements.
What June 2026 Class Action Settlement Deadlines Are Due on June 9?
Two official administrator websites list Tuesday, June 9, 2026 as the claim deadline: Cejudo v. MUBI, Inc. and Keim v. Trader Joe's Company . Both sites also explain other legal options, including exclusion and objection deadlines. Those options have different consequences, so a person who is unsure should consult a licensed attorney before making a rights-changing decision.
A claim deadline is the date by which an eligible class member must submit a claim form to ask for settlement benefits. Mailing rules and online submission rules can differ. The MUBI site says online claims must be submitted by June 9, 2026, and mailed claim forms must be postmarked by that date. The Trader Joe's site says claim forms must be submitted by June 9, 2026.
The same date may also be the exclusion deadline, objection deadline, or both. Exclusion, sometimes called opting out, generally means asking not to be bound by the settlement. Objection generally means staying in the settlement class while telling the court why the settlement should not be approved as proposed. Procedures vary by court and by settlement notice, so the official documents control.
If the deadline search has raised a separate legal issue, use Do I Qualify? to organize the facts before a legal review. Continue to file any settlement claim only through the official administrator site.
Who May Qualify for the MUBI Auto-Renewal Settlement?
The MUBI settlement is called Cejudo v. MUBI, Inc. , Case No. 5:25-cv-03652-BLF, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. The official site says California residents may be included if they signed up for a MUBI subscription on or after April 1, 2021, the subscription renewed between April 1, 2021 and May 31, 2025, and they did not receive a refund of all renewal subscription charges.
The lawsuit alleges that MUBI did not provide adequate notice that subscriptions automatically renewed and did not obtain sufficient consent to renewals. The MUBI FAQ states that the lawsuit alleged violations of California's False Advertising Law and California's Unfair Competition Law. MUBI denies liability and wrongdoing, and the court has not decided that MUBI violated the law.
The settlement fund is listed as $1.6 million. Settlement class members who submit valid and timely claim forms may receive equal cash settlement awards after deductions for notice and administration costs, court-approved attorneys' fees and costs, and any approved incentive award. The exact payment is not fixed in advance because it depends in part on the number of valid claims.
The official MUBI site lists three June 9, 2026 deadlines: claim, exclusion, and objection. The final approval hearing is scheduled for July 16, 2026. The site also states that payments will be issued only if the court approves the settlement and after any appeals are resolved. That timing note matters because a valid claim does not mean immediate payment.
Who May Qualify for the Trader Joe's FACTA Settlement?
The Trader Joe's settlement is called Keim v. Trader Joe's Company , No. 19STCV36790. The official settlement site says people may be entitled to benefits if they made a purchase at a Trader Joe's store with a credit card or debit card between March 5, 2019 and July 19, 2019. The settlement class definition depends on receipts that allegedly displayed the first six and last four digits of the card number.
The case is based on the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, often called FACTA. The statute includes a receipt-truncation rule at 15 U.S.C. section 1681c(g) , which generally limits what parts of a card number may appear on electronically printed receipts. The settlement site says the plaintiff alleged that certain Trader Joe's receipts included the first six and last four digits of the debit or credit card number. Trader Joe's denies liability and wrongdoing, and the court has not ruled on the merits of the claims or defenses.
Trader Joe's insurer agreed to a $7.4 million settlement fund. The official site says timely valid claimants will receive a pro rata payment, meaning each approved claimant's payment is based on available funds divided among valid claims after approved deductions. The site also states that identity theft is not required to submit a claim.
The official Trader Joe's settlement site lists June 9, 2026 as the claim deadline, exclusion deadline, and objection deadline. The preliminary approval ruling identifies the case number and says the final approval hearing is set for August 10, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. The ruling also notes that the final approval motion is due June 30, 2026.
What Should You Check Before Filing Any Settlement Claim?
Before submitting a settlement claim, start with the official administrator website and read the notice or FAQ. A settlement notice is not just a claim form. It explains who is included, what claims may be released, what the court has approved so far, how to object, how to opt out, and what happens if you do nothing.
For MUBI, check whether you lived in California when you signed up, when the subscription began, whether it renewed during the covered period, and whether renewal charges were fully refunded. For Trader Joe's, check whether you used a credit or debit card at a Trader Joe's store during the March 5, 2019 to July 19, 2019 period and whether the settlement notice or claim process identifies you as a potential class member.
Keep copies of any claim confirmation, notice ID, email, mailed notice, receipt, account record, or subscription history that supports your submission. Do not exaggerate facts to fit a class definition. Claim forms commonly require statements under penalty of perjury, which means false information can carry legal consequences.
If you are deciding between filing a claim, opting out, objecting, or doing nothing, consider speaking with counsel. A class settlement can release claims arising from the same alleged conduct. Whether that matters depends on your facts, your state law rights, and the release language in the settlement documents. Consult a licensed attorney in your state if preserving separate claims may be important.
How Can You Avoid Class Action Settlement Scams?
Settlement scams often appear when a deadline is close. A real administrator site should identify the case name, court, case number, administrator, mailing address, and important dates. The MUBI site states that it is the only authorized website for that case and is controlled by the court-approved settlement administrator. The Trader Joe's site identifies Verita as the administrator and provides official case documents.
Do not treat Reddit posts, social media threads, text messages, or influencer videos as authority for eligibility or payment amounts. They may point you toward a deadline, but they are not the settlement notice. If a third-party page quotes an estimated payment, confirm the actual payment formula on the official settlement site because final amounts may change after claim review, court approval, fee awards, costs, and appeals.
Be careful with sites that charge to file a simple claim, ask for unnecessary sensitive information, or pressure you with guaranteed payout language. Many settlement claims can be submitted directly to the administrator at no cost. Official claim forms may ask for information needed to verify eligibility or deliver payment, but the request should match the notice and case documents.
What June 15, 2026 Settlement Deadlines Should Be Checked Next?
After the June 9 deadlines, several official settlement sites list June 15, 2026 claim or rights deadlines. These are not substitutes for the MUBI or Trader Joe's deadlines. They are near-next items to verify directly if you received a notice or think you may be included.
In Lewis v. Register.com, Inc. , No. 1:25-cv-00275-JPH-MJD in the Southern District of Indiana, the official site lists June 15, 2026 as the claim, exclusion, and objection deadline. The settlement concerns alleged artificial or prerecorded voice calls to reassigned cellular numbers and cites the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, 47 U.S.C. section 227 .
In Doe v. Southern Illinois Healthcare Enterprises, Inc. , Case No. 2023LA55 in Williamson County, Illinois, the official site lists June 15, 2026 for claims, opt-outs, and objections. The settlement concerns alleged use of third-party tracking technologies on healthcare-related web pages, and the court has not decided who is right.
In Gregory Maricle, et al. v. SouthState Bank, N.A. , Case No. CACE-2024CA-002530 in Florida state court, the official site lists June 15, 2026 as the claim deadline for cash payment benefits. The site separately says class members who do not opt out will automatically receive credit monitoring, but a cash payment requires a valid and timely claim.
What You Can Do Before the June 9 Deadline
Use the official site first, then slow down long enough to make a rights-aware choice. These steps can help you avoid rushed mistakes.
- Open the official settlement site for the case you are checking. For June 9, use the official MUBI or Trader Joe's administrator site, not a social post or copied claim link.
- Confirm the case name, covered dates, class definition, deadline, and claim method. If the claim form asks for a notice ID, use the notice you received. If you do not have a notice ID, check whether the official site permits a claim without one.
- Decide whether you are only seeking settlement benefits or whether you may need to preserve separate rights. If the choice is unclear, consult a licensed attorney in your state before the opt-out or objection deadline passes.
- Save proof of submission and monitor the official site for updates. Final approval hearings, appeals, claim review, and administrator processing can affect when payments are issued and how much approved claimants receive.
Frequently Asked Questions
What class action settlements have a June 9, 2026 deadline?
The official MUBI auto-renewal settlement site and the official Trader Joe's FACTA settlement site both list June 9, 2026 as the claim deadline. Each site also lists June 9, 2026 as a deadline for certain rights options, including exclusion and objection.
Do I need proof to file a MUBI or Trader Joe's claim?
Review the official claim form instructions for the specific case. The MUBI materials refer to class membership based on California residency, subscription signup, renewal dates, and refunds. The Trader Joe's materials refer to card purchases at Trader Joe's during the covered period and administrator verification. Keep any notice, account record, receipt, or confirmation that supports your claim.
How much money will approved claimants receive?
No fixed payment is guaranteed here. The MUBI site describes equal cash awards from the settlement fund after approved deductions. The Trader Joe's site describes pro rata payments after administrator verification and deductions. In both settlements, the number of valid claims and court-approved costs may affect payment amounts.
When will settlement payments be sent?
Payments usually are not sent right after the claim deadline. The MUBI final approval hearing is scheduled for July 16, 2026, and the Trader Joe's final approval hearing is scheduled for August 10, 2026. Payments may depend on final court approval, appeal periods, claim review, and administrator processing.
Can I rely on Reddit or social media settlement lists?
Use social posts only as a pointer to find the official source. Eligibility, deadlines, release language, payment formulas, and claim requirements should be confirmed through the administrator site, official notice, or court documents. Scam pages and copied links can spread quickly when a deadline is close.
Conclusion
The most urgent June 2026 class action settlement deadlines are the MUBI and Trader Joe's claim deadlines on Tuesday, June 9, 2026. If you may be included, go directly to the official administrator site, read the notice, and confirm the exact claim, exclusion, and objection rules before the deadline passes. If a decision could affect separate legal rights, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
For help organizing whether a consumer claim or related legal issue may fit a broader review, start with the Do I Qualify? assessment.
This page is for general legal information only and is not legal advice. Settlement deadlines and rights depend on the official notice and court orders for each case. For advice about your own situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state.