Apple AirTag Stalking Litigation Shifts to Individual Claims After Class Action Falls Apart

Case Overview: After a class action lawsuit against Apple over AirTag stalking failed to secure class certification, more than a dozen plaintiffs have pivoted to filing individual lawsuits against the company.

Consumers Affected: Individuals who allege they were stalked or surveilled without their consent using Apple AirTag devices

Court: Federal court (U.S.)

Latest Development: Class certification denied; plaintiffs re-filing as individual lawsuits

Apple AirTag Stalking Litigation Shifts to Individual Claims After Class Action Falls Apart

A class action against Apple over AirTag stalking failed certification. Now 12+ plaintiffs are pursuing individual lawsuits. Get the latest case update.

Apple AirTag Stalking Litigation Shifts to Individual Claims After Class Action Falls Apart

More than a dozen people have filed individual lawsuits against Apple after a prior class action targeting the company's AirTag tracking devices failed to achieve class certification, according to reporting from Top Class Actions citing Law360. The development marks a significant strategic shift in litigation that alleged Apple's popular Bluetooth tracking device enabled stalking and unwanted surveillance.

What Happened

The original class action sought to consolidate claims from multiple plaintiffs who alleged they had been tracked without their knowledge or consent using AirTags — small, coin-sized Bluetooth devices Apple markets for locating lost items such as keys, wallets, and luggage. When the court declined to certify the case as a class action, the litigation did not end. Instead, plaintiffs moved forward by refiling their claims individually, with more than a dozen individual lawsuits now pending against Apple.

Background

Since AirTags launched in 2021, the devices have drawn scrutiny over their potential misuse as covert tracking tools. Law enforcement agencies and domestic violence advocates raised early concerns that abusers and stalkers could easily conceal the small trackers on victims' vehicles or belongings to monitor their movements.

Apple introduced several anti-stalking measures in response to public pressure, including alerts notifying iPhone users when an unknown AirTag has been traveling with them. Critics, however, argued those protections were insufficient — particularly for Android users, who initially had more limited notification options, and for victims who may not understand what the alerts mean.

The lawsuits allege that Apple failed to implement adequate safeguards to prevent the devices from being weaponized for surveillance and stalking.

What the Class Certification Denial Means

Class certification is a critical threshold in class action litigation. For a court to certify a class, plaintiffs must demonstrate — among other requirements — that their claims share enough common legal and factual questions to be litigated together efficiently. In stalking and surveillance cases, individual circumstances can vary significantly: how a device was deployed, the nature of the harm experienced, and the specific conduct of the alleged stalker all differ from plaintiff to plaintiff.

The denial does not mean the underlying claims lack merit. It means those claims must be litigated individually rather than collectively. For plaintiffs, this path is generally more costly and time-consuming. For Apple, it eliminates the risk of a single sweeping verdict or settlement covering a large class of consumers — though it also means the company must now defend against multiple separate lawsuits.

What's Next

With individual lawsuits now moving forward in federal court, the litigation is entering a new phase. Each case will be evaluated on its own facts, meaning outcomes could vary considerably across plaintiffs. Depending on how courts rule in early cases, the results could influence settlement discussions or shape how future claims are pursued.

Apple has not publicly commented on the individual filings. The company has maintained that AirTag was designed with privacy and safety features intended to deter misuse.


Lawsuit: Multiple individual plaintiffs v. Apple Inc.

Case Number: Multiple (individual filings)

Court: Federal court (U.S.)

MDL Number: Not applicable

Status: Class action certification denied; individual lawsuits proceeding


Were you tracked or surveilled without your consent using an Apple AirTag? Individual claims in this litigation may still be open — check eligibility below.

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