Ninth Circuit Affirms Dismissal of Brita Filter Class Action on April 16, 2026[1][2][6]

Published
Score
18

Why it matters

On April 16, 2026, the Ninth Circuit affirmed dismissal of a consumer class action against Brita Products Company, holding that a reasonable consumer would not expect a $15 water filter to remove all hazardous contaminants. Plaintiff Nicholas Brown sued under California's Unfair Competition Law, False Advertising Law, and Consumers Legal Remedies Act, claiming Brita's labels for its Everyday Pitcher and Standard Filter misled buyers into believing the products eliminated contaminants like arsenic, chromium-6, PFOA, PFOS, nitrates, and radium to undetectable levels. The three-judge panel, led by Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw, rejected the claims after the Los Angeles district court had already dismissed without leave to amend in September 2024.

The court found no actionable omission. Brita's packaging stated the filters "reduce" specific contaminants—chlorine, mercury, copper—and included a QR code linking to detailed performance data and NSF/ANSI certifications. The judges held these contextual disclosures, combined with the product's price point and the word "reduces" rather than "eliminates," made clear the filters offered partial, not complete, contaminant removal. Brown's inference that "reduce" meant total elimination was unreasonable as a matter of law.

The ruling tightens pleading standards for false advertising claims against affordable consumer products in the Ninth Circuit. Defendants can now point to price, qualified language, and supplemental disclosures—even via QR codes—to defeat claims that labels are misleading. Plaintiffs bringing similar suits should expect courts to examine packaging holistically rather than isolate individual phrases, and to apply consumer expectations calibrated to product cost.

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