Social Media Lawsuit in Michigan (Teen Mental-Health Claims)
Information for Michigan families researching the social media addiction lawsuits: MDL-3047 status, teen mental-health allegations against Meta, TikTok, Snap, and YouTube, eligibility, records, and Michigan 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.
What Michigan residents should know
Michigan families with social media injury claims are generally not limited to Michigan state court. Most federal cases are transferred into the multidistrict litigation, MDL-3047, before Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in the Northern District of California, which held 2,664 pending cases as of June 1, 2026; a parallel California state-court proceeding (JCCP 5255) handles many individual cases.
Michigan law still matters: the state's filing deadline — including rules that pause the clock while a claimant is a minor — plus its damages and procedural law can shape an individual claim even when the case is litigated in the MDL.
Possible eligibility factors
- A child or teen in Michigan who used Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat, or YouTube.
- A documented mental-health harm — such as depression, anxiety, an eating disorder, self-harm, or a suicide attempt — during or after a period of heavy use.
- Medical or treatment records connecting the harm to the period of use.
- Filing within the deadline that applies under Michigan law, accounting for rules that pause deadlines for minors.
How Michigan claims proceed
Most Michigan social media injury cases are filed in or transferred to MDL-3047 in the Northern District of California, while many individual cases also proceed in the California JCCP (JCCP 5255). Bellwether trials are underway in 2026, and there is no global settlement. Michigan's general personal injury limitations period is 3 years (Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805(2)), but many states pause that clock while a claimant is a minor — a fact-specific question for Michigan claims.
What records support Social Media claims in Michigan?
- Medical records related to diagnosis, treatment, and symptoms.
- Records showing use of, prescription for, or exposure to the product or substance involved.
- Pharmacy, clinic, employment, military, agricultural, or exposure records where relevant.
- Photos, receipts, dental invoices, pathology reports, or specialist records if applicable.
What exposure and legal context matter in Michigan?
Michigan children and teens may have used Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat, or YouTube heavily during adolescence before developing mental-health harms now being reviewed in the litigation.
Where are Michigan Social Media cases handled?
Living in Michigan does not necessarily mean the case will be filed only in Michigan. Claims may be evaluated by national firms, filed in federal court, coordinated through MDL proceedings, or handled through another legal process.
Federal courts in Michigan
- Eastern District of Michigan
- Western District of Michigan
What is the filing deadline for Social Media lawsuits in Michigan?
For a Michigan resident researching Social Media claims, the starting point is usually Michigan's general personal injury period: 3 years under Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805(2). That is only a starting point, not a final legal deadline for every person.
The real filing deadline can depend on diagnosis date, when the injury and possible cause were discovered, exposure location, wrongful-death issues, prior claim paperwork, and whether the case is filed directly, transferred to an MDL, or handled through another process.
Discovery-rule note: Michigan applies limited discovery-based accrual rules; latent-injury treatment varies by claim type.
How long do Michigan residents have to file?
Michigan's personal injury statute of limitations applicable to product liability claims is 3 years (Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805(2)). Accrual timing, tolling, and repose periods can still change the real deadline in an individual case.
- Filing period: 3 years — Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805(2).
- Discovery rule: Michigan applies limited discovery-based accrual rules; latent-injury treatment varies by claim type.
Because the controlling deadline depends on diagnosis date, discovery facts, exposure history, wrongful-death rules, and how the claim is filed, only a licensed attorney can confirm the deadline that applies to a specific situation. This page is general legal information, not legal advice.
What should Michigan residents ask a lawyer?
- Are you currently reviewing Social Media Addiction claims?
- What records do you need to evaluate my claim?
- How do Michigan filing deadlines affect my situation?
- Would my claim be handled locally, nationally, or through an MDL?
- Do you work directly on this case or refer it to another firm?
- Are there upfront costs?
Frequently Asked Questions
Where are Michigan social media addiction cases handled?
Federal cases filed by Michigan residents are transferred into MDL-3047 in the Northern District of California, and many individual cases also proceed in California's JCCP. Michigan's personal injury deadline is 3 years (Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805(2)), and a minor's deadline is commonly paused — a lawyer can confirm the timeline.
What is the social media lawsuit in Michigan 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. Michigan residents' federal cases are generally transferred into MDL-3047; many also proceed in the California JCCP. The companies dispute the allegations.
Can a Michigan family join the social media MDL?
Possibly. Cases filed by Michigan 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 Michigan social media claim?
Michigan's general personal injury period is 3 years (Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5805(2)). Michigan applies limited discovery-based accrual rules; latent-injury treatment varies by claim type. 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 Michigan 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 Michigan 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.).
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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.