Key Takeaways:
- Schall Law Firm filed a securities class action against Via Transportation on July 3
- The lawsuit alleges Via's $46 IPO documents omitted declining ARR and Germany headwinds
- VIA shares have fallen over 70% since the September 2025 IPO
Key Takeaways:

The Schall Law Firm filed a class action lawsuit against Via Transportation Inc. (NYSE: VIA) on July 3, alleging the company misled investors in documents tied to its September 2025 initial public offering.
"Via's IPO registration statements contained materially false and misleading information regarding the company's growth trajectory," the firm said in the filing.
Via sold 10.7 million shares at $46 each in its Sept. 15, 2025 IPO. The lawsuit claims the offering documents failed to disclose that the company's Platform Annual Run-Rate Revenue had begun declining and that Via faced structural obstacles expanding in Germany.
The stock has lost more than 70 percent of its value since the IPO. On Nov. 13, 2025, Via reported that ARR per customer declined for the first time in eight quarters, sending shares down 15 percent to $43.14. On Feb. 27, 2026, the company disclosed headwinds in Germany, where customers had not adopted the full platform beyond microtransit, pushing the stock down 8 percent to $17.18. On May 12, 2026, Via said Germany's constrained budgetary environment continued to limit growth, and shares fell 17 percent to $14.12.
A separate lawsuit filed by Kirby McInerney LLP makes similar allegations, and investors in both actions face an Aug. 10, 2026 deadline to seek lead plaintiff status. The litigation creates legal overhang for Via as it works to expand its platform in Europe and maintain its U.S. school and corporate transit business. Investors will watch the company's next quarterly filing for any update on customer adoption in Germany and ARR trends.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.