Millennial Money: Should I join a class-action lawsuit?
FILE - A stamp is shown on an envelope Friday, May 28, 2021, in Washington. When you receive an email or mail notice inviting you to join a class-action lawsuit, or notifying you that you’ve been automatically included, it might give you pause. Is it worth the small reward — usually under $20 — to give up your rights to sue individually? (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File) · Associated Press Finance · ASSOCIATED PRESS

It might have happened to you a few times in past years: You received an email or mail notice inviting you to join a class-action lawsuit, or notifying you that you’ve been automatically included. But being part of such a lawsuit might be intimidating, especially if you need to opt in, and would mean surrendering the option to sue individually.

In most cases, there’s little downside to joining these lawsuits, which combine many legal claims — often thousands — into one claim against a single defendant, reducing fees for each claimant and potentially earning a much larger payout.

And there have been many opportunities to do so. Following a series of large opioid settlements, 2022 had the most billion-dollar class-action settlements in U.S. history apart from the tobacco settlements decades ago, according to a report from the national law firm Duane Morris. The stakes are high for class-action lawsuits at this level, as they set standards for corporate responsibility in areas such as data privacy, employee discrimination, securities fraud and civil rights.

But in cases where you suffered significant harm, suing individually could secure a bigger payout.

WHY YOU SHOULD JOIN (OR NOT OPT OUT)

In many cases, class-action lawsuits offer such a minor payout to each victim that participation is a matter of principle, not reward. But even if you receive only $10 to $20 as compensation, joining a collective lawsuit can help other customers or employees get justice, and may deter a company from harmful practices in the future.

“It’s really a trial by proxy,” says attorney Russell T. Abney, who defends victims of dangerous drugs and defective medical devices at the law firm Watts Guerra. “The beauty of the class action,” he says, is that it adds up individual cases to a number that’s high enough to go up against a large company.

In most cases, Abney says, plaintiffs of class-action lawsuits pay legal fees on contingency, which means they don’t pay anything unless they win the case. Lawyers taking on these lawsuits will usually receive payment as a percentage of the settlement won from the company.

If you’re part of the “class” of a lawsuit — that is, if you were affected by the certain event or purchase described — you’ll often be automatically included in the lawsuit. And for certain cases, such as those relating to wage violations or defective products , you may have to opt in.

CLASS REPRESENTATIVES DON’T ALWAYS GET A LARGER PAYOUT

If you feel strongly about the outcome of a class-action lawsuit, you can also participate as a class representative, sometimes called a lead plaintiff. In some cases, becoming a class representative could lead to a bigger payout — but that isn’t always the case.