Social Media Youth Addiction Claims

★ MILLIONS RECOVERED FOR INJURED CLIENTS

Social Media Youth Addiction Claims

How Addictive Platform Design Is Harming Children’s Mental Health

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Children and teenagers are spending more time on social media than ever before—and the mental health consequences are becoming impossible to ignore. Rates of anxiety, depression, body image disorders, self-harm, and suicidal ideation among young people have surged in lockstep with social media use. Lawsuits filed by families, school districts, and state attorneys general across the country allege that platforms like Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat, and Discord were deliberately designed to be addictive—and that the companies behind them knew their products were harming children and chose profits over safety.

How Social Media Platforms Hook Young Users

The core allegation in these cases is that social media companies engineered their platforms to maximize engagement at any cost. Features like infinite scroll, autoplay, push notifications, likes and follower counts, and algorithmically curated content feeds are not random design choices—they are deliberate tools designed to exploit the developing brain’s reward system. Internal documents obtained through litigation reveal that these companies conducted research showing their platforms were causing harm to young users, and that executives were warned about the mental health effects. Those warnings were overridden by the drive for growth and advertising revenue.

The Mental Health Impact on Children

The documented effects of social media addiction on children and teenagers include anxiety and depression, sleep disruption and insomnia, body dysmorphia and eating disorders, cyberbullying and social isolation, self-harm and suicidal ideation, attention problems and academic decline, and addictive behavior patterns that mirror substance dependence. For parents watching their children struggle, the realization that these platforms were designed to produce exactly this effect is both heartbreaking and enraging.

Who Is Filing Claims

As of early 2026, nearly 1,800 cases are consolidated in a federal multidistrict litigation. Plaintiffs include individual families whose children have suffered mental health harms, more than 200 school districts nationwide that have incurred costs for counseling and intervention services, and state attorneys general from more than 40 states. A landmark trial is underway in California state court in early 2026, with Meta and YouTube as defendants. TikTok reached a settlement on the eve of trial in January 2026.

Compensation Available

Families may be entitled to compensation for therapy and mental health treatment costs, medical expenses, pain and suffering experienced by the child, loss of enjoyment of life, educational costs and tutoring, and punitive damages for knowing misconduct. School districts are seeking reimbursement for counseling services, mental health programs, and educational resources necessitated by social media’s impact on student populations.

Children deserve to grow up without being targeted by addictive technology designed to exploit them. If your child has been harmed by social media, Beverly Wilshire Law APC can help you explore your legal options. Call (310) 424-5566 or email info@bevwilshire.com for a free consultation—we’re here to guide you in the right direction.

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Frequently Asked Questions

These cases typically involve documented mental health diagnoses linked to social media use. A clinical evaluation and treatment history strengthen a claim. An attorney can help assess whether your child’s situation qualifies.
Parental oversight is important, but these lawsuits allege that platforms were specifically designed to circumvent parental controls and exploit children’s psychological vulnerabilities. The companies behind these platforms are being held accountable for deliberately creating addictive products aimed at minors.

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