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October 28, 2025

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Right now, more than 311,000 Australian Facebook users can apply for a slice of a A$50 million compensation fund from tech giant Meta – the largest ever payment for a breach of Australians’ privacy.

But the clock is ticking. Even if you’re eligible, you only have until December 31 2025 to make your claim. Similar payouts have already begun in the United States.

From who’s eligible, to how to make a claim, to how much the eventual payout might be: here’s what you need to know.

Why so many Australians can apply

The landmark settlement arose from Meta’s involvement in the Cambridge Analytica scandal: a massive data breach in the 2010s, when a British data firm harvested private information from 87 million Facebook profiles worldwide.

It led to a record-breaking US$5 billion penalty (about $A7.7 billion today) in the US against Meta as Facebook’s parent company, and the creation of a US$725 million (A$1.1 billion) compensation scheme for affected Americans.

Here in Australia, an investigation by the national privacy regulator – the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner – found Cambridge Analytica used the This Is Your Digital Life personality quiz app to extract personal information.

That investigation found just 53 Australian Facebook users installed the app. But another 311,074 Australian Facebook users were friends of those 53 people, meaning the app could have requested their information too.

In December 2024, the Information Commissioner announced she had settled a court case with Meta in return for an “enforceable undertaking”, including a record A$50 million payment program.

Claims opened on June 30 this year and close on December 31.

Who can apply?

You can apply if you:

  • held a Facebook account between 2 November 2013 and 17 December 2015 (the eligibility period)
  • were in Australia for more than 30 days during that period, and
  • either installed the Life app or were Facebook friends with someone who did.

How to apply – but watch for scams

The Facebook Payment Program is being administered by consultants KPMG. (Meta has to pay KPMG to run it; that doesn’t come out of the $50 million fund.)

That website is where to go with questions or to lodge a claim.

Meta has sent all Australians it knows may be eligible this “token” notification within Facebook:

You may be entitled to receive payment from litigation recently settled in Australia. Learn more.

Try this link to see if the company has records of you or your friends logging into the Digital Life app. If there are, you should be able to use the “fast track” application.

If you didn’t get that notification but you think you were affected, you can make a claim using the standard process by proving:

  • your identity, such as with a passport or driver’s licence
  • you held a Facebook account and were located in Australia during the eligibility period.

But watch out for scammers pretending to be from Facebook or to be helping with claims.

Which payout could you be eligible for?

You need to choose to apply for compensation under one of two “classes”, requiring different types of proof.

Class 1: the harder option, expected to get higher payouts

To claim for “specific loss or damage”, you’ll need to provide documented evidence of economic and/or non-economic loss or damages. For example, this could include out-of-pocket medical or counselling costs, or having to move if your personal details were made public.

You’ll also need to show that damage was caused by the Cambridge Analytica data breach. For many people, proving extensive loss or damage may be difficult.

Class 1 claims will be decided first. There are no predetermined payout amounts; each will be decided individually.

If your class 1 claim is unsuccessful, but you’re otherwise eligible for a payout, you will be able to get a class 2 payout instead.

Class 2: the easier option, likely to get smaller payouts

Alternatively, you can choose to claim only for loss or damage based on “a generalised concern or embarrassment” caused by the data breach.

It’s a much easier process – but also likely to be a much smaller payment.

All class 2 claimants will receive the same amount, after the class 1 payouts.

These claimants only need to provide a statutory declaration that they have a genuine belief the breach caused them concern or embarrassment.

In Meta’s enforceable undertaking with the Information Commissioner, it states KPMG is able to apply a cap on payments to claimants. It also says if there is money left after all the payouts, KPMG will pay that amount to the Australian government’s Consolidated Revenue Fund.

Meta told The Conversation:

There is not a pre-determined cap on payments. The appropriate time to determine whether any cap should apply to payments made to claimants is following the end of the registration period [December 31].

So it’s not yet clear how much of the $50 million fund will go to Australian claimants versus how much could end up going to the federal government.

Payments are expected to be made from around August 2026.

How much are payouts likely to be?

Payouts from similar settlements by Meta elsewhere have been very small. For example, US Facebook users eligible for their US$725 million compensation scheme have expressed surprise at the size of their payouts. One report suggests the average US payment is around US$30 (A$45) each.

Here in Australia, a lot will depend on how many people bother to register between now and December 31.The Conversation


Graham Greenleaf, Honorary Professor, Macquarie Law School, Macquarie University and Katharine Kemp, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law & Justice; Lead, UNSW Public Interest Law & Tech Initiative, UNSW Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Photo by Joshua Hoehne on Unsplash

  • Apparently you would have had to have been friends on facebook with someone in the USA that had been exposed which then exposed you. The number of Australians that have been exposed is very small apparently so the odds are not very high that your average person here has a claim

    Reply

  • I have a note to myself to look into this – it may be tricky to find the right documents. I don’t know that I’d expect much in the way of a payout, but it is a way, maybe, of indicating how many people were unhappy wiht how Facebook treated our data.

    Reply

  • This is crazy! From what I understand so many people are signing up so the payout figure just gets smaller and smaller and hardly worth applying! I’d be more concerned with what the payout reasoning is for and how it might have affected your privacy and security! Online safety is so crucial

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  • I honestly do not know what the Life app is? I meet the other requirements. It would be nice to get a bit of free money, but I honestly cannot see how I would qualify unfortunately. I am still waiting for compensation due to price gouging by the supermarkets. That hasn’t bourn fruit yet…

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  • How are you supposed to know if your friends had that app installed?

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  • I saw this! But it’s so hard to register. You’ve got to have an email from Facebook saying you were on at this time and you cannot contact Facebook… and you’ve got to be able to demonstrate you lived in Australia at the time with a bill or something. From 12 plus years ago??!! You’ve only got to keep your tax records for five, there’s no way I have anything that proves I lived here!

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  • I would not have a clue if any of my friends had this app installed so it would be hard to judge. This is the first I am hearing of this, mind you I don’t really get the time to listen to the news so I am never up to date with things like this.

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  • It will be very interesting to know if any friends or family have been impacted by this breach. It will also be interesting to know if anyone from this community is impacted. I do hope no one was impacted by the breach. Vigilance with information and apps is so important in a digital world.

    Reply

  • Thank you! If I saw that message, I probably figured that it was a scam, and ignored it. I certainly don’t remember it. I may well be eligible for it, so I will look into it further. I remember the initial scandal that led to this litigation, and it was appalling behaviour by Facebook.

    Reply

  • I would have no idea if any of my friends on Facebook had that app installed. As much as I’d love a little extra splash, I don’t want to suss out that info haha. I’m stoked for anyone who already has it lined up and is ready to cash in. Its really gross how lax companies are with our privacy.

    Reply

  • It is sad that these things are happening ; we live in a world and in a time that the misuse of personal information is a big thing. It is sad that we have to be so cautious and nearly suspicious when sharing personal details, it makes you feel that no one is to be trusted.

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  • Breach of privacy and so much work to make a claim in the light of digital events that materialosed 10 yrs ago with vague details and for what? $50?? No, thank you. Whats done been done and cant be undone but i can definitely save myself time and hassle for this useless persuit!!

    Reply

  • This seems like quite a big process to claim compensation for those impacted by the breach. Also; it is so very important for anyone claiming compensation for the breach to make sure any links are legitimate because the information requested to prove identity should not fall into the wrong hands.

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  • It sounds absolutely like a big admin nightmare having to prove it just for a mere $50 or so for each person affected. Is it really worth the time andd energy i wonder having to try and prove it and go through it all just for the small payout. I personally wouldnt think so

    Reply

  • It is going to be difficult for Facebook users to know if they are one of the 311,074 people impacted by this data breach given the timeframe and without knowing who the 53 app users were.

    Reply

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