Quick answer

Information about the Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) antitrust settlement will come from official settlement administrator emails sent from these verified addresses: [email protected] for initial notices and [email protected] for payment/virtual card notifications.

Official email addresses you should see

Based on settlement administrator communications and public guidance, here are the legitimate sender addresses tied to the BCBS settlement:

  • [email protected] – Used for the original class notice and general settlement information emails.
  • [email protected] – Used when sending payment details, including notices about virtual Visa prepaid cards for approved claimants.
  • [email protected] – Listed as the official contact email for questions (often appears in footers or “contact us” sections rather than as a bulk sender).

If you’re checking your inbox, also search for subject lines like “Blue Cross Blue Shield Subscribers Settlement Payment” to find relevant messages.

How to verify it’s not a scam

Because this settlement has been widely impersonated, treat any email carefully:

  • Don’t click links in the email. Instead, type www.BCBSsettlement.com directly into your browser to verify your claim status or payment details.
  • Use official contact channels if unsure. Call the settlement hotline at 1-888-681-1142 or email [email protected] to confirm.

Red flags include misspelled domains (e.g., “bcbs-settlement.com” or “bcbssettelment.com”), requests for full SSN or bank logins, or pressure to “act now” via unusual payment methods.

What the emails typically say

  • Notice emails explain the $2.67B antitrust settlement, eligibility (generally people enrolled in certain BCBS plans between 2008–2020), and how to file or check a claim.
  • Payment emails tell approved claimants how much they’ll receive and how to activate a virtual debit card or receive other payment methods.

If you think you should have gotten something but haven’t, check spam/junk folders and search your email for “Blue Cross Blue Shield” plus “settlement” or “payment.”

TL;DR

  • Always verify by visiting the official site directly—don’t rely on email links.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.