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Home Depot Lawsuit: No Claims Process Yet

The Home Depot Lawsuit does not yet have a claim form or a filing deadline listed, so claims cannot be filed today. A class action lawsuit (Schmierer et al. v. Home Depot U. 3 eligibility requirements are listed below.

Updated July 14, 2026

Coming soon
Deadline to claim

What is the Home Depot Lawsuit about?

A class action lawsuit (Schmierer et al. v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc., Case No. 3:26-cv-03967, filed May 1, 2026 in federal court in California) alleges that Home Depot operates automated license plate recognition (ALPR) cameras in its California store parking lots that secretly capture and transmit drivers' vehicle data to law enforcement. The complaint claims the cameras, supplied by vendor Flock Safety, record license plates, vehicle details, timestamps, and location information and feed that data into a centralized, searchable database accessible to nationwide law enforcement agencies. The suit alleges violations of the California Automated License Plate Recognition Privacy Act, the California Consumer Privacy Act, the Unfair Competition Law, the California Civil Code, and the state constitutional right to privacy, citing failures such as no defined data retention period, unrestricted law enforcement sharing, and inadequate accuracy safeguards. The case is in its early stages; no settlement has been reached, no class has been certified, and no claim form is available yet. This listing may involve a proposed or pending settlement. Final approval, claim availability, eligibility, timing, and any payment depend on court approval, administrator instructions, and final settlement terms. Payout does not administer the settlement, determine eligibility, or guarantee payment.

Who qualifies for the Home Depot Lawsuit?

You may qualify for the Home Depot Lawsuit if you meet the eligibility requirements below. Eligibility is finally determined by the settlement administrator, not by Payout.

  • Drove or parked a vehicle at a Home Depot store in California
  • Your license plate may have been captured by automated license plate recognition (ALPR / Flock) cameras and shared with law enforcement
  • No claims process available yet — class action filed May 1, 2026 in federal court in California (Case No. 3:26-cv-03967)

Frequently asked questions

Before you file

If this is your first claim, how to claim a class action settlement walks through the process end to end, and what class action settlements actually pay per person explains how the amount is decided before you spend time on the form. Many cases need no receipts at all — see settlements with no proof of purchase. Shop at Home Depot? Their Home Depot price adjustment policy is a separate way to get money back when a price drops.

Payout is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Settlement information is for general informational purposes only. Eligibility, legal representation, and any payment amount are determined by the settlement administrator, court, or participating law firm and are not guaranteed.