The Social Media Addiction Lawsuit is a massive, nationwide legal action brought by thousands of parents, school districts, and 34 State Attorneys General against major tech companies. The lawsuit claims platforms like Meta (Instagram and Facebook) and Google (YouTube), TikTok, and Snapchat intentionally designed their apps to be highly addictive to children, allegedly producing a severe mental health crisis among American teenagers.
This lawsuit is not about policing what kids see in videos or pictures. Because of free speech laws, companies cannot be easily sued for user-generated content. Instead, this lawsuit is based on product-liability-style claims, arguing that the apps themselves are defective products with addictive designs.
Following a major ruling by a federal judge in October 2024, failure-to-warn claims are considered among the strongest claims moving forward in MDL 3047:
The lawsuit specifically targets the psychological tricks engineered into these apps. Plaintiffs argue that these features exploit the dopamine pathways.
The Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) is another major part of the lawsuit. The lawsuits allege that platforms collected the personal information of children under 13 without permission and without prior consent from their parents, using this data to feed the algorithms of addiction.
The litigation does not claim that social media is generally bad for kids. The official master complaint clearly defines the psychological and physical injuries caused by the companies’ addictive designs. According to the court documents, the lawsuit alleges that the designs correlate with:
Proving a tech giant’s algorithm directly caused your child’s suffering requires a clear connection between medical evidence and complex legal criteria. You do not have to figure this out alone. Our intake team handles the heavy lifting to see if you have a case:
These companies spent billions on their platforms, and holding them accountable calls for careful legal strategy and thorough documentation. Find out if your family has a valid social media adolescent addiction claim while the 2026 trials are still unfolding.