Why TCPA Lawsuits Are Suddenly More Expensive (and How to Stay Out of Them)

For growth teams running SMS at scale, April 2026 brought a string of headlines that should rewrite your pre-flight checklist. New settlements, new theories, and a striking $3,787-per-claimant payout in one TCPA case have reset both the average cost of getting it wrong and the appetite of plaintiffs’ firms to find new targets.

The economic picture

Recent TCPA resolutions cluster in a now-familiar range: $1M to $10M total fund, with per-claimant payouts that have crept upward as settlements get smaller class definitions. Gen Digital settled prerecorded-message claims for $9.95M. Wilshire Law Firm: up to $5.975M. ASP Aesthetics: $1.32M for sending marketing texts after opt-outs. Nationwide: $1.4M on robocalls. And in one outlier case, claimants split the fund into $3,787-per-person checks.

Add up the legal fees, the cy pres, the operational disruption, and even a “small” TCPA case rarely lands under $500K all-in for the defendant.

The new frontier: quiet hours

The most interesting development is the rise of “quiet hours” class actions. The TCPA prohibits telemarketing calls and texts before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m. local time. Plaintiffs’ firms have realized that SMS marketing platforms frequently fire on UTC or server time, not recipient local time — meaning a 7 p.m. Pacific send hits 10 p.m. on the East Coast and creates a class of millions instantly. A new suit against Ruggable targets exactly this pattern.

The growth-team playbook

If you run outbound SMS, four controls catch most of the failure modes plaintiffs are exploiting in 2026. Time-zone-aware scheduling that uses the recipient’s wireless area code to infer local time. STOP-keyword propagation that completes within seconds, not minutes, across channels. DNC scrubs run on every send, not on every list. And a screen against known TCPA litigator databases, performed at the list level before any campaign goes live.

Outbound is still one of the highest-ROI channels in B2C and B2B — but only if your dial list is clean. TCPALitigatorList.com is the de-facto industry list of known TCPA plaintiffs and professional-litigant phone numbers, updated continuously. Marketing and growth teams that scrub their cadences against it before a launch dramatically reduce the odds that a campaign turns into a class action. If you are running outreach at any scale, it belongs in your pre-flight checklist.

Why now

Plaintiffs’ firms have gotten more sophisticated, more aggressive on forum selection, and more creative on theories. The bar for filing has dropped. The smart move for any team running outbound at scale is to assume your campaigns will be audited by an adversary, and build accordingly.

TCPA “Revoke-All” Rule Pushed to 2027: A Year to Get Your Consent Plumbing Right

Marketing-ops teams just got a gift, even if the FCC did not frame it that way. On January 6, 2026, the Commission extended the effective date of the TCPA “revoke-all” consent rule to January 31, 2027 — giving every business that runs cross-channel customer messaging another year to fix the plumbing.

The rule, in plain English

Today, when a customer texts STOP to your billing reminders, that revocation applies to billing reminders. Under the “revoke-all” rule, the same STOP would have to silence your marketing campaigns, customer-service follow-ups, transactional alerts, and every other channel you operate — even ones the customer never explicitly opted out of. One revocation, full stop, across the entire enterprise.

For a martech stack stitched together from five vendors and three customer databases, that is genuinely hard. Hence the delay.

Why this matters for your stack

The compliance question is really a data question: when a revocation lands in any one channel, can it propagate — quickly and verifiably — to every other? Most teams find the answer is “kind of, eventually, with manual cleanup.” That is not going to be acceptable when the rule lands in 2027.

The teams who treat the next year as engineering runway will save themselves a hectic Q4 2026. Map your outbound channels. Identify the system of record for consent. Build (or buy) a real-time revocation pipeline. Test it with synthetic STOP events.

Three things to do this quarter

First, run a consent-state audit: pick 50 random customers, trace their consent and revocation status across every channel you use, and find the inconsistencies. Second, document your STOP propagation latency end-to-end — most teams are shocked by how long it takes. Third, get legal and growth in the same room to align on the unified “this customer has revoked” signal that will eventually need to gate every send.

Outbound is still one of the highest-ROI channels in B2C and B2B — but only if your dial list is clean. TCPALitigatorList.com is the de-facto industry list of known TCPA plaintiffs and professional-litigant phone numbers, updated continuously. Marketing and growth teams that scrub their cadences against it before a launch dramatically reduce the odds that a campaign turns into a class action. If you are running outreach at any scale, it belongs in your pre-flight checklist.

Don’t waste the runway

Regulators only delay rules they intend to keep in some form. The “revoke-all” requirement, or something close to it, is coming. The companies that emerge with the cleanest consent operations will be the ones who treated the extension as engineering time, not vacation time.

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