To file a claim in the Dollar General Price Overcharge Settlement, visit DGPriceSettlement.com and submit a claim form before the April 13, 2026 deadline. You have two options: claim up to $10 in cash (or the actual overcharge amount, whichever is higher) if you have documentation of a specific overcharge, or receive a $3 in-store discount with no proof required — you just need a myDG account. The settlement stems from *Jennifer Braun v. Dolgencorp, LLC d/b/a Dollar General*, a class action alleging that Dollar General charged customers more at the register than the price displayed on store shelves.
The national settlement totals $8.5 million in cash plus $6.5 million in injunctive relief, covering all U.S. consumers who paid a different price at checkout than the advertised shelf price at any Dollar General store from October 10, 2016 through November 19, 2025. That is a nine-year class period, which means even if your overcharge happened years ago, you may still qualify. Beyond the national settlement, individual states have pursued their own actions — Pennsylvania secured a $1.55 million settlement and Vermont obtained $1.75 million — which speaks to how widespread the pricing problems have been. This article walks through exactly how to file your claim, what documentation you need, the differences between the two payout options, and the key deadlines you cannot afford to miss.
Table of Contents
- What Are The Claim Options In The Dollar General Price Overcharge Settlement?
- What Documentation Do You Need To Maximize Your Payout?
- Key Deadlines You Need To Know Before Filing
- How The Cash Payment Compares To The In-Store Discount
- Why Dollar General Faced Multiple State Investigations
- What Pennsylvania’s Settlement Means For Dollar General Shoppers
- What Happens After The Settlement Is Finalized
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Are The Claim Options In The Dollar General Price Overcharge Settlement?
The settlement offers two distinct paths for claimants, and which one you choose depends entirely on whether you kept any evidence of being overcharged. The cash payment option provides up to $10 or the actual overcharge amount — whichever is higher — for up to two documented overcharges per household. To qualify for cash, you need what the settlement terms call “qualifying proof,” which includes documentation of a contemporaneous complaint to a government entity or to dollar General itself, or objective contemporaneous evidence of a specific overcharge. Think of a receipt showing one price alongside a photo of the shelf tag showing another, or a record of a complaint you filed with your state attorney general’s office.
The second option is the in-store benefit: a $3 discount at Dollar General that requires no proof of overcharge whatsoever. You simply need a myDG account or must complete the registration form available on the settlement website. For someone who remembers being overcharged but tossed the receipt years ago, this is the realistic option. Three dollars is not a windfall, but it requires almost no effort. By contrast, if you happen to have a dated photo on your phone showing a shelf price that did not match your receipt, that documentation could be worth $10 or more per incident, up to two incidents.

What Documentation Do You Need To Maximize Your Payout?
The strongest claims will pair a receipt with some form of contemporaneous evidence showing the shelf price differed from what was charged. “Contemporaneous” is the key word here — the settlement is not looking for you to walk into a store today and photograph a mismatched tag. The evidence needs to be from the time the overcharge actually occurred. A complaint you logged with Dollar General’s customer service line, a filing with your state’s consumer protection office, or even a timestamped photo from when you noticed the discrepancy all count.
However, if you only have a receipt with no corresponding shelf price evidence, your claim for the cash option may not meet the qualifying proof threshold. The settlement administrators will review submissions, and vague or unsupported claims are likely to be denied for the cash tier. This is a common frustration with class action settlements — the people most affected often lack the documentation to prove it. If you are unsure whether your evidence qualifies, file for the cash option anyway and select the in-store benefit as a fallback. The worst outcome is receiving the $3 discount instead of the cash payment, which is still better than filing nothing at all.
Key Deadlines You Need To Know Before Filing
The claim submission deadline of April 13, 2026 is the date that matters most for anyone planning to file. But several other deadlines have already passed or are imminent. The opt-out and objection deadlines were both March 2, 2026, meaning the window to exclude yourself from the settlement or formally object to its terms has closed. The final fairness hearing is scheduled for March 19, 2026, at which point the court will decide whether to grant final approval.
For practical purposes, this means the settlement is in its final stages. If the court approves the deal at the March 19 hearing, claim processing will move forward and payments will eventually be distributed to approved claimants. If you have not yet filed, you still have until April 13, 2026. Do not wait until the last day — the settlement website could experience heavy traffic near the deadline, and any technical issues on your end could cost you the filing window. Set a reminder for early April at the latest.

How The Cash Payment Compares To The In-Store Discount
Choosing between the two options comes down to a straightforward tradeoff: effort and evidence versus simplicity. The cash payment of up to $10 per overcharge (for up to two overcharges per household) means a maximum of roughly $20 if you have solid documentation for two separate incidents. That money comes to you directly — no strings attached, no requirement to spend it at Dollar General. The in-store discount of $3 requires you to spend it at the same retailer that overcharged you in the first place, which some claimants may find ironic. On the other hand, the in-store benefit has a much lower barrier to entry.
No receipts, no photos, no complaint records. Just a myDG account and a completed claim form. For many class members, especially those who experienced small overcharges of a dollar or two, the $3 in-store credit may actually exceed what they lost. Someone who was charged $4.50 instead of $3.75 on a single item — a $0.75 overcharge — would come out ahead with the $3 discount. But someone who was charged $15 for an item marked at $8 and has the receipt and shelf photo to prove it would clearly want the cash option, since their actual overcharge amount exceeds the $10 minimum.
Why Dollar General Faced Multiple State Investigations
The national class action was not an isolated legal action. Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday obtained a separate $1.55 million settlement with Dollar General in December 2025 after state inspections revealed that Dollar General stores failed more than 40 percent of pricing accuracy inspections between 2019 and 2023 across its 900-plus Pennsylvania locations. Forty percent is a staggering failure rate — it means that on a given inspection, nearly half the time, prices at the register did not match what was on the shelf. Vermont separately secured $1.75 million from Dollar General for pricing inaccuracies in its own state-level settlement.
These state actions matter because they demonstrate a pattern, not isolated incidents. When multiple attorneys general across different states independently find the same problem, it undercuts any argument that overcharges were random errors. The injunctive relief portion of the national settlement — worth $6.5 million — requires Dollar General to hire third-party pricing auditors, dedicate staff to tracking pricing errors, and provide regular corporate reporting for at least two years. Whether those measures actually fix the problem remains to be seen, but the court clearly recognized that cash alone was not enough.

What Pennsylvania’s Settlement Means For Dollar General Shoppers
The Pennsylvania settlement imposed specific operational requirements that go beyond what the national class action mandates. Dollar General must now train employees on price accuracy, maintain sufficient staffing to update shelf tags on a weekly basis, conduct at least two unannounced pricing audits per fiscal year, and correct all price inaccuracies within 24 hours of discovery.
These are concrete, enforceable requirements — not vague promises to “do better.” For shoppers in Pennsylvania, this creates a layer of accountability that did not exist before. If you notice a pricing discrepancy at a Pennsylvania Dollar General going forward, the company is now legally obligated to fix it within a day. That kind of specific, time-bound requirement is unusual in retail settlements and reflects just how serious the state found the violations to be.
What Happens After The Settlement Is Finalized
The final fairness hearing on March 19, 2026 will determine whether the court grants final approval to the settlement terms. Assuming approval, the claims administration process begins in earnest — reviewing submitted claims, verifying documentation for cash payment requests, and processing the in-store discount enrollments. Distribution timelines in class action settlements are notoriously slow, so claimants should not expect immediate payment even after approval.
Looking ahead, the injunctive relief component may have the most lasting impact. Third-party pricing audits and dedicated compliance staff could meaningfully reduce overcharges at Dollar General stores nationwide over the next two years. If the audits reveal continued problems, it could open the door to additional legal action. For now, the most important step for any affected consumer is to file a claim before April 13, 2026 and hold onto whatever pricing documentation they have.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is eligible for the Dollar General Price Overcharge Settlement?
All U.S. consumers who paid a different price at checkout than the advertised shelf price at any Dollar General store from October 10, 2016 through November 19, 2025.
How much money can I receive from the settlement?
You can receive up to $10 or the actual overcharge amount (whichever is higher) for up to two documented overcharges per household if you have qualifying proof. Without proof, you can receive a $3 in-store discount.
What counts as qualifying proof for the cash payment?
Documentation of a contemporaneous complaint to a government entity or Dollar General, or objective contemporaneous evidence of a specific overcharge — such as a receipt paired with a photo of the shelf tag showing a different price.
What is the deadline to file a claim?
The claim submission deadline is April 13, 2026. Claims must be filed through DGPriceSettlement.com.
Is the Pennsylvania settlement separate from the national class action?
Yes. Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday obtained a separate $1.55 million settlement in December 2025. The national class action settlement of $8.5 million covers all U.S. consumers and is a distinct legal proceeding.
Do I need a myDG account to file a claim?
Only if you are choosing the $3 in-store discount option. You can either have an existing myDG account or complete the registration form on the settlement website as part of the claims process.
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