Millions of families in the U.S. may have had drinking water contaminated with PFAS (per- and poly-fluoroalkyl) substances commonly known as “forever chemicals.” PFAS include perfluorooctane sulfonate (“PFOS”) and perfluorooctanoic acid (“PFOA”). These chemicals have been used for various industrial purposes for years, including use in firefighting foam products used to put out chemical fires.
Using PFAS around the country has led to widespread groundwater contamination. Exposure to PFAS in contaminated groundwater has been shown to cause cancer and other health conditions. If you have been diagnosed with cancer after being exposed to water contaminated with PFAS, you may be able to file a lawsuit and get financial compensation. This page will provide news and updates about PFAS water contamination lawsuits and our estimated settlement value of these cases.
If you have cancer and believe it was from PFAS exposure, call our PFAS lawyers today at 800-553-8082 or get a no-obligation free consultation online. Our law firm makes it easy to sign up for a water contamination lawsuit and to get compensation.
PFAS Water Contamination Lawsuit Updates for 2025
We start by keeping you abreast of the latest news, information, and updates related to PFAS water contamination lawsuits:
Trial Date Pushed; Claims Need to Be Filed By September 5th
The first bellwether trial in the PFAS foam multidistrict litigation has been taken off the calendar after the court determined that too many potential claims remain unfiled. On August 15, Judge Richard Gergel issued Case Management Order No. 35, which requires the Plaintiffs’ Executive Committee to file every case they represent that involves kidney cancer, testicular cancer, ulcerative colitis, thyroid disease, liver cancer, or thyroid cancer. He gave them a 21-day Filing Facilitation Window that runs through Friday. The order also encourages non-lead counsel to file their cases within that period and makes the process easier by permitting bundled complaints and short-form pleadings.
Judge Gergel’s order sets strict proof requirements. Each case must be supported by records that demonstrate a diagnosis, evidence of PFAS exposure, and reliable documentation of residency or work history. All of this information must be submitted through the court’s electronic portal. The judge explained that the flood of unfiled claims could destabilize the MDL and threaten settlement discussions already underway. He directed both sides to provide detailed compliance updates in the coming months and made clear that further orders would follow if attorneys fail to meet these obligations.
From our perspective, September 5 is likely to become a practical cutoff for getting new PFAS personal injury cases into this MDL. Victims and their families who believe they have claims should not delay. Lawyers will need time to prepare records and comply with the court’s documentation requirements. If you wait past this date, you risk losing your place in the litigation and any chance to be part of a potential recovery. Now is the time to act.
Judge Denies Perdue Farms’ Attempt to Dismiss PFAS Suit in Maryland
A federal judge in Maryland has delivered a strategic win for plaintiffs, rejecting Perdue Farms’ motion to dismiss a newly filed PFAS contamination lawsuit brought by Salisbury residents alleging toxic wastewater dumping. Two claims were eliminated, including one seeking company-funded cleanup remediation. But the core of the action survives and moves forward. This decision signals that courts are refusing to let industry sidestep accountability, even at the earliest procedural stages, which plaintiffs’ counsel will seize as momentum builds for substantive discovery and remediation demands.
New Jersey Secures Record‑Breaking $2 B PFAS Settlement with DuPont, Chemours & Corteva
New Jersey has clinched what may be the largest environmental settlement by any U.S. state—$2 billion with DuPont, Chemours, and Corteva to resolve PFAS contamination claims at four industrial sites. This settlement flows over decades, funding cleanup and establishing a safety net in the event of default or bankruptcy. Plaintiffs’ lawyers can point to this as a benchmark—proof that persistence and coordinated litigation strategies can yield consequential compensation and meaningful remediation.
Personal injury and wrongful death victims have a hard time getting excited about all of this. It is their turn to be compensated.
Wisconsin Supreme Court Greenlights Regulator Authority to Force PFAS Cleanup
In a 5–2 ruling, the Wisconsin Supreme Court empowered state regulators to demand PFAS cleanup—even before the chemicals are formally designated hazardous. This preemptive regulatory authority opens a strategic frontier, enabling trial teams to secure early cleanup mandates against polluters—shortening the path to both relief and leverage in toxic tort litigation.
Clark County Residents Join AFFF Lawsuit Over Toxic Exposure
In a new lawsuit filed last week, residents of Clark County, Nevada, have filed a water contamination lawsuit, alleging severe and lasting health consequences from exposure to toxic firefighting foam.
The plaintiffs claim they were exposed to AFFF while living near military sites and firefighting training centers in Southern Nevada, including areas in and around Las Vegas. Exposure occurred through occupational use and contaminated drinking water. The foam—containing PFAS, a class of chemicals linked to cancer and immune disorders—was allegedly used for decades without adequate warnings or protections.
The lawsuit accuses chemical manufacturers of knowingly distributing dangerous products while concealing their health risks. Plaintiffs are seeking damages for medical costs, pain and suffering, and the creation of a medical monitoring program.
With momentum building nationwide, this filing marks yet another step in holding corporations accountable for the widespread contamination of PFAS. Lawyers are rushing to file these cases, thinking filed claims will likely be prioritized in any forthcoming settlement framewor
DuPont Agrees to $27 Million Settlement in Hoosick Falls PFAS Class Action
After nearly nine years of litigation, DuPont will pay $27 million to settle a class-action over PFAS-contaminated drinking water in Hoosick Falls, New York—adding to a total recovery that now exceeds $92 million for the affected community. This result underscores how sustained pressure and community-based litigation can eventually yield concrete results, even if they are unwelcome for defendants.
New Mexico Targets Air Force in PFAS Groundwater Contamination Suit
New Mexico has sued the U.S. Air Force, accusing it of ignoring state directives to remediate a PFAS plume from Cannon Air Force Base that has contaminated drinking water, agriculture, and even forced the culling of thousands of dairy cows. The suit demands mitigation, compensation, and binding cleanup protocols—reminding litigators that even entrenched federal actors can be held to account under state toxic tort frameworks.
AFFF Settlements May Be Close — Do Not Wait to File Your Claim
If you have even a passing interest in bringing a PFAS/AFFF lawsuit, this is your window.
Settlement negotiations are heating up behind the scenes. Based on everything we are hearing from contacts close to the litigation, we believe a global deal for personal injury claims could be coming soon. The court is applying pressure, and the chemical manufacturers know their time is up. If you want to be included in that first wave of payouts, your claim needs to be filed now, not later.
Here is the reality: when these settlements hit, plaintiffs already in the system will be at the front of the line. If you wait until after a framework is announced, your chances of inclusionlet alone priority placement—drop considerably. Bringing a claim now preserves your right to opt into any global deal and puts you in the strongest possible position.
Our PFAS water contamination lawyers are following the negotiations closely and know how this process is unfolding. If you want in, this is the moment. Call today, because the opportunity to join a mass settlement does not stay open forever (and probably not long).
EPA Delays TCE Worker Safety Rules Amid Legal Battle
The EPA has postponed enforcement of key safety rules on trichloroethylene (TCE) until August 19, 2025, for battery separator and document coating manufacturers.
The industries claim the EPA’s 2024 limit of 0.2 ppm is economically crippling and technically unfeasible. Microporous LLC and other stakeholders petitioned to raise the exposure limit to as high as 6.0 ppm. Meanwhile, PPG Industries argued that the rule threatens a $1 billion market. Labor and environmental groups are pushing back, warning that a stay would leave workers unprotected from TCE exposure.
Does it ever end? This is yet another example of federal regulators buckling to industry pressure while workers pay the price. TCE’s dangers are well-documented, yet companies want the freedom to keep exposing workers because mitigation costs hurt their bottom line. When agencies hesitate to act, it is trial lawyers who have to step in and fight for the victims who are left behind, sick, disabled, or dead. This delay does not protect industry innovation; it protects corporate negligence.
AFFF MDL Grows to Over 10,000 Cases as Bellwether Trial Approaches
The Aqueous Film-Forming Foam multidistrict litigation (MDL 2873) has expanded to include over 10,391 pending lawsuits, with a notable surge of 1,049 new cases filed in the past month.
This increase is largely attributed to plaintiffs seeking inclusion in potential settlements ahead of the scheduled bellwether trials. Our lawyers think you will see a global settlement this year that could come at any time. The first personal injury bellwether trial, focusing exclusively on kidney cancer claims, is set to commence on October 20, 2025. That trial will likely never happen.
Science Day Scheduled to Address PFAS Health Impacts
Judge Gergel has scheduled a “Science Day” for June 20, 2025, in the AFFF MDL. This session will allow both plaintiffs and defendants to present scientific evidence regarding the health effects of PFAS exposure, particularly focusing on liver and thyroid cancers. The outcomes of this session are expected to influence the admissibility of expert testimonies and shape the strategies for the upcoming bellwether trials.
More Water Contamination Lawsuit Updates and News
Maryland Expands Lawsuit Against W.L. Gore for PFAS Contamination
The Maryland Attorney General has expanded the state’s lawsuit against W.L. Gore & Associates, alleging that the company’s manufacturing facilities have contaminated local groundwater and soil with PFAS chemicals. The amended complaint includes additional claims related to environmental damage and public health risks, asserting that the company failed to take adequate measures to prevent contamination. Residents living near the affected sites may be eligible for compensation due to potential exposure to these harmful substances.
3M Reaches $450M PFAS Deal in NJ While DuPont Heads to Trial
New Jersey announced a $450 million settlement with 3M over PFAS water contamination tied to DuPont’s Chambers Works site. The deal includes over $60 million for cleanup and NRD starting in 2026, with payments stretching to 2050. It is separate from 3M’s AFFF MDL agreement. DuPont, Chemours, and Corteva refused to settle and face trial next week, with the state seeking nearly $1 billion for groundwater remediation.
While this case centered on environmental remediation, it demonstrates 3M’s urgency to shut down sprawling PFAS litigation before it expands further. Personal injury claims, which involve far more complex and emotionally charged allegations are a different beast entirely. This settlement does not touch those claims, but it adds pressure. The hope among plaintiffs’ lawyers is that these environmental payouts are just the first phase, and that personal injury lawsuits will soon take center stage. 3M clearly wants to box in its liability, but for victims suffering real, lasting harm, they want their turn at the settlement table.
3M Opposes Fourth Circuit Review in PFAS Contamination Case
3M has filed a response urging the Fourth Circuit not to reconsider a panel decision that kept PFAS contamination lawsuits from Maryland and South Carolina in federal court. The states had filed separate lawsuits. One is focused on consumer product-related PFAS contamination and the other on military-grade aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF). To limit the application of the government contractor defense, 3M argues that because PFAS from both sources are chemically indistinguishable and commingled in the environment, all claims are necessarily connected to its federal work and should remain in federal court.
The panel previously sided with 3M, finding a sufficient nexus between the contamination allegations and 3M’s federal conduct to justify removal under the federal officer removal statute. The states are now seeking an en banc rehearing, asserting that their disclaimers regarding AFFF contamination should have allowed the consumer-focused cases to proceed in state court.
3M contends that the panel correctly followed precedent by crediting its theory of the case, including that a factfinder will need to resolve complex causation and allocation questions that implicate its federal defense. The company warns that allowing the states’ disclaimers to dictate jurisdiction would create a circuit split and undermine federal officer removal protections.
But this is a significant jurisdictional issue. If 3M succeeds in keeping these bifurcated cases in federal court, it will limit the states’ ability to pursue targeted claims and avoid the government contractor defense. In framing all PFAS contamination as inseparable, 3M is, as the plaintiffs motion says, “effectively trying to prevent states from holding it accountable in any court not shielded by federal defenses.”
The Fourth Circuit’s decision on whether to grant rehearing has broader implications for how PFAS litigation proceeds across jurisdictions, especially where states are deliberately structuring claims to focus on consumer-level pollution.
Judge Picks 12 Test Sites to Help Trace PFAS Contamination to Manufacturers
A group of over 50 plaintiffs from across the country has filed suit in Alabama federal court, alleging they suffered serious personal injuries due to exposure to AFFF.
The lawsuit names dozens of major chemical manufacturers, including 3M, DuPont, Chemours, and Tyco, as defendants. It claims they knowingly produced and distributed AFFF containing PFAS compounds such as PFOA and PFOS, which contaminated drinking water and caused lasting health damage. The claims include negligence, battery, nuisance, fraudulent concealment, and product liability.
The case was initially filed in Alabama state court but has since been removed to federal court under the federal officer removal statute. Tyco, one of the defendants, asserts it was manufacturing AFFF under strict specifications set by the U.S. Department of Defense and is, therefore, entitled to a government contractor defense. The plaintiffs allege their injuries resulted from exposure to both military and civilian use of PFAS-laden foam over many years, and they seek damages for pain, suffering, medical costs, and punitive relief.
Judge Picks 12 Test Sites to Help Trace PFAS Contamination to Manufacturers
The MDL judge has picked 12 sites that will serve as test cases to help figure out which companies made the toxic chemicals or firefighting foam responsible for pollution. These locations—mainly airports, fire stations, and training facilities—are spread across seven states, including Maryland, Florida, and Alaska.
The idea is to see if records from these sites can trace the PFAS contamination back to specific manufacturers of firefighting foam. These facilities were chosen because they are more likely to still have purchase records that could show who made and sold the foam. Without this link, it becomes significantly more challenging for plaintiffs to establish which companies are liable for the toxic exposure.
New Water Contamination Lawsuit
In a new lawsuit filed yesterday, a family from West Haven, Connecticut, joined the growing multidistrict litigation over PFAS and AFFF exposure. As you see in so many of these lawsuits, the family alleges that their child developed serious health conditions—including ulcerative colitis and liver damage—after years of exposure to toxic chemicals found in firefighting foam and contaminated drinking water.
According to the complaint, the child was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis in 2022 and later identified with elevated liver enzymes in 2023. The suit argues these injuries were caused by prolonged exposure to PFAS, including in utero exposure, as the chemicals are known to persist in the body and environment.
The family’s claims center on product liability, negligence, and failure to warn, asserting that the defendants knew of the dangers of PFAS in AFFF but continued to manufacture and distribute the products without adequate warnings. They seek both compensatory and punitive damages for the harm sustained
MDL Judge Shoots Down Government’s Motion to Dismiss
A federal judge in South Carolina has denied the U.S. government’s broad attempt to dismiss all PFAS-related lawsuits, ruling that site-specific facts must be examined before deciding jurisdiction. The decision means that cases against the military for PFAS contamination—including those brought by local communities, businesses, and state governments—will continue.
Judge Richard M. Gergel rejected the government’s effort to shield itself under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and CERCLA, stating that “material jurisdictional facts at the outstanding sites are still in dispute.” While the government succeeded in dismissing some claims tied to Cannon Air Force Base, particularly those seeking injunctive relief, claims involving negligent handling of AFFF contamination at military sites remain active.
This ruling reinforces that the government can still be held accountable for operational failures in handling toxic firefighting foam, opening the door for more site-specific claims to move forward. The next steps will involve jurisdictional discovery at the remaining contaminated sites, ensuring that affected plaintiffs have their day in court.
New Teva and Estée Lauder Water Contamination Lawsuit
Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. and Estée Lauder Cos. are among more than a dozen companies sued by the Village of Nyack, N.Y., over allegations that their manufacturing and waste disposal operations contaminated the town’s drinking water supply with toxic per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).
The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, seeks to hold the companies financially responsible for testing, monitoring, and installing water treatment systems to remove PFAS from the Hackensack River, Nyack’s primary water source. According to the complaint, the defendants’ facilities, which include pharmaceutical, cosmetic, industrial, and waste processing plants, used PFAS in manufacturing, product formulations, and waste disposal. These chemicals allegedly leached into the environment, ultimately contaminating the town’s drinking water.
The complaint asserts that Teva, Estée Lauder, and other defendants “knew, or should have known” that their operations were releasing PFAS into the water supply, posing significant health risks. The chemicals, often called “forever chemicals” due to their persistence in the environment, have been linked to cancer, immune system suppression, and other health problems.
The lawsuit states that Nyack’s water supply contains PFAS levels exceeding the Environmental Protection Agency’s newly established maximum contaminant level of 4.0 parts per trillion. The village argues that the contamination has created an ongoing public nuisance, interfering with residents’ right to clean and safe drinking water.
Santa Clara County Files PFAS Water Contamination Lawsuit
Santa Clara County, California, filed a significant new water contamination lawsuit this week against various companies. The lawsuit alleges that PFAS chemicals have contaminated the public water supply systems servicing county residents from AFFF firefighting foam manufactured by the defendants, which include 3M and DuPont.
New Study
A new study published in the Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology links PFAS in drinking water to increased cancer incidence across the U.S. from 2016 to 2021. Using data from the SEER Program and PFAS monitoring programs, researchers found associations between PFAS exposure and cancers in the digestive, respiratory, endocrine, and oral cavity/pharynx systems. They estimated that PFAS in drinking water contributed to 4,626–6,864 cancer cases annually. Notable findings include strong links between PFBS and oral cancers and PFHxS and digestive cancers, underscoring the health risks posed by these “forever chemicals.”
The study also identified sex-specific risks, with thyroid and oral cancers linked to PFAS in females and brain, urinary, and leukemia cancers linked in males. PFAS compounds, known for their endocrine-disrupting properties and ability to damage DNA, are now shown to affect a broader range of cancers than previously studied.
Do we need more evidence that PFAS cause cancer? Not really. But more weapons are always good, and this study helps with some plaintiffs where the evidence of a connection was not as strong. So this research bolsters PFAS-contaminated drinking water lawsuits by providing scientific evidence that directly links these chemicals to specific cancers. We will leverage these findings to argue that water suppliers and manufacturers failed to prevent or address known contamination risks. The study’s detailed estimates of cancer cases attributable to PFAS contamination strengthen negligence claims and help quantify damages, offering a robust foundation for legal arguments in ongoing and future litigation.
New Agreement
A new proposed order, issued yesterday, outlines procedures for selecting sites where AFFF, a firefighting foam linked to PFAS contamination, is alleged to have been used and caused environmental damage.
Not surprisingly, the focus is on locations such as airports and fire training centers, designated as “Real Property Product ID Sites.” Eligibility for this category requires plaintiffs to meet specific procedural milestones: filing and serving complaints by December 20, 2024, and submitting a thoroughly completed Plaintiff Fact Sheet by the end of December, with any deficiencies addressed by January 17, 2025.
The process involves the Defense Coordinating Committee providing a proposed Product ID Profile Form by January 17, 2025, which will facilitate the identification of relevant sites by gathering basic information through a standardized checklist. This form aims to streamline the initial screening process without necessitating verification or a signature from plaintiffs, thus speeding up the selection process. By February, the parties are expected to have proposed and agreed upon a list of 10 to 15 sites for more detailed product identification discovery, which will commence immediately and continue for six months. This discovery phase will include written and documentary discovery and depositions, adhering strictly to the scope defined in the CMO to ensure focused and efficient proceedings.
The whole idea here is to manage the complexities of the litigation efficiently. We need a clear, predefined path that facilitates the gathering of evidence necessary for resolving claims related to AFFF contamination, and this order helps organize the water contamination lawsuits. The lawyers were able to agree because this plan helps both plaintiffs seeking redress and defendants coordinating their defense strategies.
Where Are the Biggest Problems?
What are the most vulnerable states in the U.S. when it comes to PFAS contamination and environmental risks, and where should testing be prioritized? It’s a tough question, and the list of impacted states keeps growing. PFAS have infiltrated water systems, soils, and communities nationwide, leaving no region untouched by the environmental and health risks they pose.
Each state faces unique challenges based on geography, climate, and industrial activity. For example, California, already grappling with devastating wildfires like those currently sweeping Los Angeles, also faces significant PFAS risks. Firefighting foams, widely used to combat these fires, are a major source of PFAS contamination in water supplies, making urgent water quality testing necessary in affected regions. Meanwhile, Florida, with its dual threats of coastal flooding and hurricanes, is at risk of PFAS spreading through saltwater intrusion and stormwater runoff, particularly in communities near military installations or airports where firefighting foam has been heavily used.
Texas, another PFAS hotspot, must contend with contamination near industrial hubs and areas affected by hurricanes, where storm surges can carry PFAS into drinking water supplies. Similarly, Louisiana’s vulnerability to coastal erosion and powerful storms highlights the need for comprehensive water testing in areas near chemical plants and oil refineries, which are known sources of spitting out tons of PFAS pollution. Even states like New York, often regarded as environmentally resilient, face significant risks from aging infrastructure and PFAS contamination near former manufacturing sites and military bases.
In the Southwest, prolonged drought conditions in Arizona are straining groundwater resources, making PFAS testing critical as communities rely more heavily on these aquifers. Further north, Michigan stands as a cautionary tale, with its history of PFAS-contaminated drinking water in cities like Parchment and Oscoda, alongside the ongoing fallout from industrial pollution in areas like Flint. The state remains a high-priority zone for widespread PFAS monitoring and remediation.
Pre 2025 Updates
November 23, 2024: Nantucket Residents File PFAS Lawsuit
Today’s PFAS update involves a group of residents on Nantucket Island who have filed a class action lawsuit against PFAS manufacturers for contamination of their water supply. The lawsuit comes after the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection found extremely high levels of PFAS in well water for a group of houses in the Toms Way neighborhood. The houses are very close to a site formerly occupied by the Nantucket Electric Company, which is suspected to be the source of the contamination. Defendants named in the lawsuit include DuPont, The 3M Company, Arkema, and BASF Corp.
Lawsuit Information Center