What is a Class Action? What is a Mass Arbitration?

Key Takeaways: 

  • Class actions are lawsuits where one or a few people represent a large group or a “class” in court.
  • Mass arbitrations are lawsuits that include many hundreds or thousands of people filing individual arbitrations against the same company
  • Class actions and mass arbitrations’ biggest difference is that class actions are one case and many people, whereas mass arbitrations are many cases with one company.

What is a Class Action?

A class action is a lawsuit where one or a few people represent a large group (the “class”) in court. Everyone with similar claims against the same company gets grouped together under one case.

How it works:

• One case often represents thousands or millions of people

• Goes through the traditional court system

• A judge oversees everything

• Public proceedings—anyone can see what’s happening

• If you win, any amount recovered gets divided among all class members

• Usually takes a few years to resolve

What is a Mass Arbitration?

Mass arbitration flips the script. Instead of one lawsuit that includes many people, hundreds or thousands of people file individual arbitrations against the same company.

How it works:

• Each person files their own claim

• Claims are handled by a private arbitrator, not a judge

• Proceedings happen outside of court in private

• May resolve faster than a class action

• Each person can potentially recover more money individually than as part of the class

The Big Difference

Class Action = One Case, Many People

Think of it like everyone boarding one bus to get to court together.

Mass Arbitration = Many Cases, One Company

Think of it like thousands of people each driving their own car, as opposed to taking the bus.

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