By Jonathan Stempel
March 4 (Reuters) – Allstate must face a privacy lawsuit accusing the home and auto insurer of illegally tracking drivers through โtheir cellphones without consent, using their data to raise premiums or โdeny coverage, and selling the data to other insurers.
In a decision on Tuesday, U.S. District โJudge Jeremy Daniel in Chicago said drivers in the proposed class action can try to prove that Allstate violated the Federal Wiretap Act by monitoring their travel locations, trip distances, speed, acceleration, braking, phone usage and attention to the โroad, and tried to monetize โ that data to boost profit.
Drivers can also try to show that Allstate’s data analytics unit Arity violated the federal Fair โ Credit Reporting Act by inaccurately reporting their driving behavior, including when they rode as passengers.
According to the complaint, Arity’s tracking software was integrated into apps such โas Fuel โRewards, GasBuddy, Life360 and Allstate-owned Routely.
The judge โalso let drivers pursue claims โunder the laws of 20 U.S. states. He dismissed three of the drivers’ 38 claims.
Insurers such as Allstate, Progressive and Berkshire Hathaway’s Geico use so-called telematics in monitoring drivers’ habits. They say the technology rewards good driving through lower premiums.
Allstate argued that drivers never alleged it actually captured their data, or โthat their insurance rates went up. It โalso said its privacy policies disclosed the โpossibility of data collection.
Allstate said โin a statement on Wednesday: “Consumers who choose to share driving โdata through Arity-powered apps can access โemergency assistance, track fuel โefficiency and unlock personalized insurance rates after a clear notice and explicit opt-in process.”
Lawyers for the plaintiffs did not immediately respond to requests โfor comment.
The litigation combined โ15 private lawsuits against the Northbrook, Illinois-based insurer. Texas filed a โsimilar lawsuit against Allstate in January 2025.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in โNew York; Editing by Mark Porter)