Anytime Fitness class action lawsuit overview:
- Who: Plaintiff Chet Michael Wilson filed a class action lawsuit against Anytime Fitness Franchisor LLC and Anytime Fitness Springfield.
- Why: Wilson claims Anytime Fitness placed unsolicited calls to consumers’ phone numbers listed on the National Do Not Call Registry.
- Where: The Anytime Fitness class action lawsuit was filed in Oregon federal court.
Anytime Fitness placed unsolicited prerecorded telemarketing calls to consumers whose phone numbers were listed on the National Do Not Call Registry, a new class action lawsuit alleges.
Plaintiff Chet Michael Wilson claims Anytime Fitness also routinely uses an artificial or prerecorded voice to place non-emergency calls to wrong or reassigned phone numbers.
Wilson wants to represent a nationwide class of consumers who received at least two calls from Anytime Fitness during a 12-month period while their phone numbers were listed on the National Do Not Call Registry.
Wilson also wants to represent a nationwide class of consumers who received at least one phone call from Anytime Fitness during a 12-month period that used an artificial or prerecorded voice.
“Plaintiff suffered actual harm as a result of Defendants’ calls, including an invasion of privacy, an intrusion into his daily life and a private nuisance,” the Anytime Fitness class action lawsuit says.
Anytime Fitness calls resulted in voicemails inviting plaintiff to visit fitness club, class action alleges
Wilson argues the unsolicited phone calls Anytime Fitness placed to him in December 2025 resulted in voicemail messages being delivered to his phone.
The voicemails identified Anytime Fitness and invited Wilson to visit a fitness club location, take a tour and schedule a booking with a manager, according to the Anytime Fitness class action.
“The voicemail messages were delivered using an artificial or prerecorded voice,” the Anytime Fitness class action lawsuit says. “The messages were uniform in tone and content, lacked natural human inflection and were delivered in an automated manner consistent with prerecorded voice technology.”
Wilson claims Anytime Fitness is guilty of violating the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. He demands a jury trial and requests declaratory and injunctive relief and an award of statutory damages for himself and all class members.
In 2024, the Federal Communications Commission declared artificial intelligence-generated robocalls to be “artificial” calls under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, making them illegal and giving state attorneys general a new tool to protect the public from scammers.
Do you believe Anytime Fitness placed unsolicited calls to your phone number? Let us know in the comments.
Wilson is represented by Andrew Roman Perrong of Perrong Law LLC.
The Anytime Fitness class action lawsuit is Wilson v. Anytime Fitness Franchisor LLC, et al., Case No. 6:26-cv-00019, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
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2 thoughts onAnytime Fitness faces TCPA lawsuit over unsolicited prerecorded voicemail messages
Please let me apart of this they screwed me royally
I received a few calls when i am on dnc