Does Your Child Play Roblox? Sign Up for the Roblox Privacy Mass Arbitration Today
Last Updated on February 19, 2026
At A Glance
- This Alert Affects:
- Parents and/or guardians of children under 13 who used a Roblox account within the last two years.
- What’s Going On?
- Attorneys working with ClassAction.org believe that Roblox may regularly and persistently track the personal data of minor users and distribute it to third-party advertisers without consent from users or their parents/guardians, potentially violating state and federal privacy laws.
- What You Can Do
- If you are the parent or guardian of a child under 13 who has played Roblox in the last two years, join others taking action by filling out the form linked below.
- What Am I Signing Up For, Exactly?
- You’re signing up for what’s known as “mass arbitration,” which involves hundreds or thousands of consumers bringing individual arbitration claims against the same company, at the same time, over the same issue. This is different from class action litigation and takes place outside of court.
- Does This Cost Anything?
- It costs nothing to sign up, and the attorneys will only get paid if they win your claim.
- How Much Could I Get?
- While there are no guarantees, affected users and their parents/guardians who take action could have claims worth $100s or even $1000s under state and federal privacy laws.
Has your child played Roblox in the past two years?
If so, you may be able to take action for unpaid wages and more. It doesn’t cost anything to sign up, and all you have to do is fill out a quick form using the link below.
Attorneys working with ClassAction.org believe that Roblox may be illegally collecting and distributing the personal data of minors on its gaming platform in violation of federal and state privacy laws, including the Electronic Communications Privacy Act and the Stored Communications Act.
Specifically, the attorneys suspect that Roblox’s website and apps may be embedded with various trackers that collect users’ data, which is allegedly then distributed by Roblox to various third-party advertisers without the consent of users or their parents or guardians. They believe that the data tracking and surveillance may begin as soon as a player launches the Roblox app or website, even before they log in.
According to the attorneys, the data Roblox may collect and distribute from users under 13 could include:
- Audio cues from the users or their surroundings;
- Device identifiers and signatures;
- IP addresses;
- Device and browser configurations;
- Details of installed fonts and graphics; and
- Mouse movements and keystrokes.
The lawyers further suspect that Roblox may be using the audio and device information to generate a unique fingerprint for each user and track them across multiple devices, platforms and operating systems.
If your young child has played Roblox in the past two years, join others taking action by filling out this quick, secure form.
Roblox Privacy Class Action Lawsuit Compelled to Arbitration
In May 2025, a class action lawsuit was filed against Roblox alleging that it illegally collects huge amounts of personal data from its players, the majority of whom are minors.
The suit claimed that Roblox used a variety of hidden tracking technologies to “wiretap” every interaction between a player and the gaming platform, including those mentioned above. Then, per the complaint, Roblox both monetized data on its own platform by building behavioral analyses of players to show them targeted content and keep them hooked on the Roblox platform, as well as distributed that data to third-party advertisers.
At no point, the filing alleges, are the users—or their parents, in the case of minor users—ever asked to give or revoke consent for Roblox’s alleged data collection, and Roblox allegedly never provides notice or warning of any data tracking practices.
While these alleged abuses of privacy, the suit claims, are already illegal under various state and federal laws, the complaint notes that they are especially egregious in the case of Roblox, as the vast majority of its user base are minors, and approximately 46 percent of its daily active users are under the age of 13 (and therefore additionally protected by the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, as well as other privacy laws).
However, the Roblox privacy lawsuit was compelled to arbitration—a more informal legal dispute resolution process that occurs outside of court before a neutral arbitrator, rather than in front of a judge or jury—by the court on February 11, 2026.
Per court documents, the primary reason the case went to arbitration is because, in having their Roblox accounts, the lawsuit’s plaintiffs had agreed, on multiple occasions, to Roblox’s terms of use, which contain a binding arbitration clause, an agreement that compels users (or their legal guardians) to arbitrate their disputes with the company instead of pursuing a lawsuit.
Because of this arbitration clause, attorneys working with ClassAction.org have decided to pursue the potential Roblox privacy issue through mass arbitration, a relatively new legal technique that, like a class action lawsuit, allows a large group of people to take action and seek compensation from a company over an alleged wrongdoing. Here is a quick explanation of mass arbitration from our blog:
“[M]ass arbitration occurs when hundreds or thousands of consumers file individual arbitration claims against the same company over the same issue at the same time. The aim of a mass arbitration proceeding is to grant relief on a large scale (similar to a class action lawsuit) for those who sign up.”
How Much Does This Cost?
It costs nothing to sign up for the mass arbitration, and you’ll only need to pay if the attorneys win money on your behalf. Their payment will come as a percentage of your award.
If they don’t win your claim, you don’t pay.
How Much Money Could I Get?
There are no guarantees as to whether your claim will be successful or how much money you could get. However, affected users and their parents/guardians could have claims worth $100s or even $1000s.
Sign Up and Take Action
Has your child played Roblox in the past two years?
Join others taking action by filling out this quick, secure form.
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