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Social Media Lawsuit in Florida (Teen Mental-Health Claims)

Information for Florida families researching the social media addiction lawsuits: MDL-3047 status, teen mental-health allegations against Meta, TikTok, Snap, and YouTube, eligibility, records, and Florida filing deadlines.

This guide is for general information only. It does not provide legal advice, does not create an attorney-client relationship, and case status can change.

Florida Product Liability Updated June 29, 2026
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Frequently Asked Questions

Where are Florida social media addiction cases handled?

Federal cases filed by Florida residents are transferred into MDL-3047 in the Northern District of California, and many individual cases also proceed in California's JCCP. Florida's personal injury deadline is 4 years (Fla. Stat. § 95.11(3)(d)), and a minor's deadline is commonly paused — a lawyer can confirm the timeline.

What is the social media lawsuit in Florida about?

Lawsuits allege Meta (Instagram, Facebook), TikTok, Snapchat, and YouTube were designed to be addictive to young users and caused mental-health harms, and that families were not adequately warned. Florida residents' federal cases are generally transferred into MDL-3047; many also proceed in the California JCCP. The companies dispute the allegations.

Can a Florida family join the social media MDL?

Possibly. Cases filed by Florida residents in federal court are generally transferred into MDL-3047 in the Northern District of California, and some cases proceed instead in the California state-court JCCP. Where a claim is filed depends on strategy and individual facts.

What is the statute of limitations for a Florida social media claim?

Florida's general personal injury period is 4 years (Fla. Stat. § 95.11(3)(d)). Florida applies a four-year period to injury actions founded on the design, manufacture, distribution, or sale of personal property. Florida's 2023 tort reform (HB 837) cut the general negligence period to two years (§ 95.11(4)(a)) but did not change the product-liability period at § 95.11(3)(d). Latent-injury accrual rules can apply. Many states also pause the deadline while a claimant is a minor, so only a lawyer can confirm the deadline for a specific situation.

Which companies are involved for Florida claimants?

The main defendants are Meta (Instagram, Facebook), TikTok/ByteDance, Snap (Snapchat), and Google/YouTube. Which companies are relevant depends on which platforms the young person actually used.

What records matter most for a Florida claim?

Records of which platforms were used and at what ages, plus mental-health diagnosis, therapy, hospitalization, or school records connecting the harm to the period of use, are commonly reviewed first.

Has there been a social media settlement?

No global settlement exists as of June 2026. Some defendants have reached confidential settlements in individual bellwether cases, and a California bellwether returned a $6 million verdict against Meta and YouTube in March 2026. No amount is guaranteed for any individual claim.

Is this page legal or medical advice?

No. This page is general legal information for research only and is not medical advice. If you or someone you know is in crisis, you can call or text the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (U.S.).

Other Lawsuit Guides in Florida

Sources and Update Log

Last reviewed
June 29, 2026
Last updated
June 29, 2026

Sources reviewed may include court filings, MDL notices, public agency materials, manufacturer disclosures, and law firm case-status updates where applicable.

Recent updates focus on lawsuit status, state-specific context, eligibility factors, records, deadlines, and editorial disclosures.