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The San Francisco Archdiocese Settled for $395 Million. If You Have a Claim, Here Is What to Do Next.

The Archdiocese of San Francisco's June 2026 bankruptcy settlement covers approximately 530 survivors and sets the record for diocese bankruptcy resolutions. If you believe you may have a claim related to San Francisco clergy or any diocesan bankruptcy, time to consult an attorney matters.

Abuse Justice Center · 2026-07-09 · 6 min read

Reviewed by Abuse Justice Center · Updated 2026-07-09

Key takeaways

  • The Archdiocese of San Francisco reached a $395 million settlement agreement on June 29, 2026 — the largest in a U.S. Catholic diocese bankruptcy — to resolve approximately 530 clergy sexual abuse claims.
  • Survivors who believe they may have a connection to the San Francisco Archdiocese, or to any diocese in a bankruptcy proceeding, should consult an attorney immediately to determine whether any claim filing window remains open.
  • Claims bar dates in bankruptcy cases are hard deadlines — missing one typically means receiving nothing from the settlement fund, regardless of the validity of the underlying claim.
  • The Abuse Justice Center matches survivors with attorneys who handle these cases on contingency — no cost unless there is a recovery, and every consultation is confidential.
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SF Archdiocese Settlement: What You Need to Know
$395M
Total settlement, largest in a U.S. diocese bankruptcy, June 2026
530
Approximate survivor claimants in the SF Archdiocese case
~$745K
Average per-claimant value before attorney fees
Dec 31, 2026
California AB2777 lookback window closing date for independent state claims
$0
Upfront cost to consult through the Abuse Justice Center — contingency only

The SF Archdiocese settlement and the California AB2777 window create a dual opportunity for eligible survivors. Sources: KQED, June 2026; ABC News, June 2026.

What the $395 Million Settlement Covers

On June 29, 2026, the Archdiocese of San Francisco announced it had reached a settlement to resolve clergy sexual abuse claims filed by approximately 530 survivors, with a total value of $395 million. The agreement came three years after the archdiocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in August 2023. The case proceeded through the formal bankruptcy claims process, during which survivors who had filed valid claims were assessed by a claims administrator.

At roughly $745,000 per claimant on average before attorney fees, the per-survivor figure in this case is among the highest recorded in a Catholic diocese bankruptcy. The archdiocese also committed to a broad set of institutional reforms as part of the agreement, including publication of a credibly accused clergy list, amendment of whistleblower policies, creation of an anonymous online reporting portal, and release of prior survivors from non-disclosure agreements.

The settlement is still subject to federal bankruptcy court approval. Until that approval is granted, the agreement is in principle but not yet final. Survivors who believe they may have an unresolved connection to the archdiocese — or who are uncertain whether they filed a claim in the bankruptcy proceeding — should consult with an attorney now rather than waiting for the court process to conclude.

How Diocese Bankruptcy Claims Work and Why Deadlines Are Critical

When a diocese files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the court establishes a formal claims process. Survivors with potential abuse claims are given a defined window — set by a court order specifying the claims bar date — to file their claims within the bankruptcy proceeding. This is not an optional or open-ended step. Survivors who do not file before the bar date are generally excluded from the distribution entirely, even if their underlying claim would otherwise have been valid.

Once the court approves a settlement, the settlement amount is placed into a trust administered by an independent claims administrator. That administrator evaluates each filed claim, assigns a value based on established criteria, and distributes funds accordingly. The process takes time, but it only applies to people who filed claims within the designated window. Someone who contacts an attorney after the bar date has passed typically has no path back into the proceedings.

For survivors in states with active lookback windows — California's AB2777 window, for example, closes December 31, 2026 — the urgency is compounded. A survivor may have both a potential diocesan bankruptcy claim and an independent civil claim under state law. An attorney can evaluate both simultaneously and advise on which path or combination of paths makes sense given the specific facts and current deadlines.

You Do Not Have to Navigate This Alone

Many survivors who may have valid clergy abuse claims have not yet spoken with an attorney. Some are unsure whether what happened to them qualifies as a civil claim. Some are concerned about cost. Some are not ready to speak publicly or file a police report. These are all understandable concerns, and none of them disqualify a survivor from having a meaningful conversation with an attorney about their options.

A civil clergy abuse claim is not a police report. It is a private legal action, pursued in civil court, that seeks financial accountability from the institution responsible for allowing the abuse to occur. Many civil claims proceed without any interaction with law enforcement, and the outcome of criminal proceedings — whether or not they happen — does not determine the viability of a civil case.

The Abuse Justice Center is a free, confidential matching service that connects survivors with attorneys who specialize in civil institutional abuse claims. Every attorney in the network handles these cases on a contingency basis, meaning there is no upfront cost and no payment unless there is a financial recovery. If you believe you may have a claim related to clergy abuse in San Francisco or any other institution, a confidential conversation with an attorney is the right first step.

Beyond San Francisco: Other Active Diocese Cases

The San Francisco settlement joins a wave of diocese resolutions that have moved through bankruptcy courts in recent years. The Archdiocese of New York has proposed an $800 million settlement covering roughly 1,300 claims. The Archdiocese of New Orleans agreed to $230 million. Several other dioceses across the country are in various stages of bankruptcy proceedings, and new cases continue to emerge as survivors use state lookback windows to file claims before those windows close.

For a survivor who was abused by clergy in a diocese other than San Francisco, the process is broadly similar: a formal claims filing within the bankruptcy proceeding, subject to a bar date set by the court. What varies significantly is the specific deadline in each case and the current status of any applicable state law that may create an independent civil claim outside the bankruptcy process.

An attorney matched through the Abuse Justice Center can evaluate your situation across all potentially relevant proceedings — diocesan bankruptcy, state civil lookback window claims, and any other applicable legal avenues — and advise on which paths remain open and which deadlines are most urgent. The consultation costs nothing. The information you receive could change what is available to you.

Six Questions Survivors Ask Before Contacting a Lawyer — Answered

Many survivors who have valid claims hesitate to reach out because of uncertainty about the process. Here are the most common concerns, answered plainly.

  1. Do I need a police report?: No. A civil clergy abuse claim is separate from a criminal complaint. Civil attorneys do not require a police report to evaluate or pursue a claim.
  2. Does it cost money to consult?: Not through the Abuse Justice Center. Every attorney in the network works on contingency — no upfront fees, no payment unless there is a financial recovery.
  3. Will my name become public?: Many civil abuse cases are filed anonymously or under initials. An attorney can explain the confidentiality options available in your jurisdiction before you decide whether to move forward.
  4. What if the abuse happened a long time ago?: Lookback window legislation in many states specifically allows claims for older abuse that would otherwise be time-barred. Whether your claim qualifies depends on when and where the abuse occurred — an attorney can assess this.
  5. What if I already signed a settlement agreement?: Prior settlements may include confidentiality clauses, but the San Francisco settlement specifically released prior survivors from their NDAs. An attorney can review any prior agreement you signed and advise on what it allows.
  6. What if I'm not sure the abuse was serious enough?: A civil attorney can evaluate the facts you describe and advise on whether they support a viable claim. You are not obligated to take any action after that conversation — the consultation is just information.

Abuse Justice Center is a lawyer-matching and advocacy service, not a law firm, and nothing here is legal advice. Matching and consultations are free, and network attorneys work on contingency. Need support now? The RAINN hotline is 800-656-4673, 24/7.

Related

FAQ

What Survivors Ask Us

If you were sexually abused by a clergy member or employee of the Archdiocese of San Francisco, or at an institution under its jurisdiction, you may have a claim. Whether a filing window remains open depends on the current status of the bankruptcy proceedings. An attorney can determine this quickly and advise on your options without any cost or obligation.

A claims bar date is the court-established deadline for submitting a claim in a bankruptcy proceeding. Survivors who miss this date are generally excluded from any distribution from the settlement fund. It is one of the most important deadlines in institutional abuse litigation, and it cannot be extended after the fact for late filers.

Potentially, yes. In California, survivors may be able to file a claim in a diocese bankruptcy proceeding and also pursue an independent civil claim under the AB2777 lookback window, which is open through December 31, 2026. An attorney can evaluate both pathways and determine how they interact in your specific situation.

The Abuse Justice Center is a free, confidential matching service. When you reach out, we connect you with an experienced civil attorney who handles institutional abuse cases in your area. The attorney evaluates your situation, explains applicable deadlines and options, and handles the case on contingency if you decide to move forward — no payment unless there is a recovery.