RIPPLE, Circuit Judge.
The plaintiffs brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, on behalf of themselves and a class of similarly situated individuals, against the Director (“Director”) of Illinois’ Department of Children and Family Services (“DCFS”) for due process violations. After the plaintiffs secured a preliminary injunction against the Director, they sought an interim award of attorneys’ fees. The district court granted the plaintiffs attorneys’ fees and costs. For the reasons set forth in the following opinion, we now reverse the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
A more thorough rendition of the facts underlying this case is available in our opinion addressing the merits of the district court’s preliminary injunction.
See Dupuy v. Samuels (“Dupuy III”),
397 F.3d 493 (7th Cir.2005). For the purposes of this opinion, the following description shall suffice.
The plaintiffs are child-care workers and foster parents who had been indicated, in reports maintained on DCFS’ State Central Register (“Central Register”), as perpetrators of child abuse or neglect. They brought this suit against the Director of DCFS on behalf of themselves and other similarly situated individuals. The plaintiffs sought injunctive relief on the ground that DCFS procedures for investigating and reporting allegations deprived them of due process of law.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1983.
The district court granted the plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction.
See Dupuy v. McDonald (“Dupuy
I”), 141 F.Supp.2d 1090 (N.D.Ill.2001). In
Dupuy I,
the district court found that a number of the DCFS policies that the plaintiffs had challenged were “not constitutionally adequate.”
Id.
at 1134. However, rather than enter specific relief, the court afforded the parties sixty days in which to develop constitutionally adequate procedures.
The parties later negotiated changes to DCFS policies in court-mediated sessions. At the same time, DCFS itself also drafted new procedures for assessing the credibility and relevancy of the information obtained during an investigation of suspected child abuse. Specifically, the new draft procedures required DCFS employees to consider all evidence, both inculpatory and exculpatory, in an investigation into a suspected incident of child abuse.
After this process was completed, the district court issued an order directing specific relief and resolving the remaining disputes between the parties. R.443. With respect to the standard for assessing evidence of suspected child abuse, the district court found DCFS’ new draft policies to be a salutary improvement and directed DCFS to continue weighing all evidence in
determining whether a report should be indicated for child abuse.
The district court also found that due process required some form of formal appeals process before an indicated report was recorded on the Central Register. Therefore, the court ordered a limited telephonic administrative review (“the administrative conference”) prior to the entry on the Central Registry of any indicated finding of child abuse.
The district court also ordered more rapid post-deprivation hearings for childcare workers; specifically, the court ordered that child-care workers who timely requested an appeal would be entitled to a hearing and a final decision within thirty-five days. The district court specified which members of the plaintiffs’ class would be entitled to the administrative conference and the expedited hearings.
The parties appealed, and this court affirmed in part and reversed in part the district court’s injunction.
See Dupuy III,
397 F.3d at 515.
B. District Court Fee Proceedings
In February 2004, the plaintiffs filed a petition for attorneys’ fees.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1988. Specifically, they asked for an award of $3,228,673, an amount equal to the fees and expenses that had been incurred through March 2002.
In an order issued October 21, 2004 (the “fee order” or “district court’s fee order”), the district court granted in part and denied in part the plaintiffs’ petition for fees. The court also ordered the Director to make an interim payment of $1,000,000. The court noted that the plaintiffs had “w[o]n a judicial order granting them relief,” R.584 at 3 — relief which the court described as “substantial,” “effectively permanent” and largely “unchallenged on appeal,”
id.
at 5. Thus, because the plaintiffs were “prevailing parties]” as described by § 1988, the court determined that a fee award was appropriate in this case. The court also concluded that neither the Supreme Court’s decision in
Buckhannon Board & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Department of Health & Human Resources,
532 U.S. 598, 121 S.Ct. 1835, 149 L.Ed.2d 855 (2001), nor this court’s decisions in
Alliance to End Repression v. City of Chicago,
356 F.3d 767 (7th Cir.2004), and
Sonii v. General Electric Co.,
359 F.3d 448 (7th Cir.2004), barred an interim award of attorneys’ fees in this case.
The court did not award attorneys’ fees in the entire amount which the plaintiffs had requested. The district court noted that local court rules establish a procedure for parties to share information with the goals of developing a “joint statement” concerning the amount of fees sought and identifying disputes between the parties related to fees. N.D. Ill. R. 54.3. However, because the Local Rule 54.3 process would require significant efforts both from the court and from the parties, and because the litigation had not reached a final conclusion, the court decided that it would award a reduced amount of the fees rather than engage in the Local Rule 54.3 process. Therefore, the court awarded the plaintiffs attorneys’ fees in the amount of $1,000,000. The Director appealed to this court.
II
ANALYSIS
A. Jurisdiction
We first must resolve the question of our jurisdiction to hear this appeal. An interim award of attorneys’ fees generally is interlocutory and not appealable until the conclusion of the underlying suit on the merits.
See Estate of Drayton v.
Nelson,
53 F.3d 165, 166-67 (7th Cir.1994). There is, however, one exception to this rule: An interim award of fees may be appealed if “the party against whom the award is made will not be able to get his money back if he prevails at the end of the case and the award is vacated then.”
Id.
at 167.
The plaintiffs assert that the exception is inapplicable here and therefore that this court lacks jurisdiction over this appeal. From the plaintiffs’ submissions to this court before oral argument, it was unclear whether they actually claimed that they would be able to repay the fee award if the Director ultimately prevailed in the underlying suit and the award were vacated.
See, e.g.,
Appellees’ Reply Br. at 3 (“There is no non-repayment risk — much less the type of substantial risk the case law refers to — because there is no reversal risk. And there is no reversal risk because the Director’s appeal, on its merits, is frivolous .... ”). At oral argument, it became clear that there is indeed a risk that the plaintiffs and their counsel will lack the financial wherewithal to repay the award should it be reversed sometime in the future. However, the plaintiffs continued to assert at oral argument that there is no risk of non-repayment because it is unlikely repayment ever will be ordered. In the plaintiffs’ view, the chances are quite slim that the Director will prevail on the merits, thus requiring them to repay the fee award.
The plaintiffs’ theory does not reflect accurately the reasoning behind our cases concerning the appealability of an interim fee award. “Our court has ... [been] careful to emphasize that appeal depends on a demonstration that the money, once disbursed, is effectively beyond recall in the event of reversal at the end of the case.”
Constr. Indus. Ret. Fund of Rockford v. Kasper Trucking, Inc.,
10 F.3d 465, 468 (7th Cir.1993);
see also Palmer v. City of Chicago,
806 F.2d 1316, 1319 (7th Cir.1986) (finding jurisdiction over appeal of interim fee order when members of class to whom fee was paid “might be insolvent” or “might have disappeared” by the end of litigation),
cert. denied,
481 U.S. 1049, 107 S.Ct. 2180, 95 L.Ed.2d 836 (1987).
It is clear from our cases that it is the future financial solvency of the party to whom fees are being awarded that matters in the determination whether jurisdiction exists. The parties have not brought to our attention any case explicitly finding a lack of jurisdiction on the theory that the party against whom interim fees are awarded has a very low chance of ultimately prevailing on the merits. Thus, because the plaintiffs have admitted that there is a risk they would be unable to repay the fee award in the future if so required, we find that we have jurisdiction over this appeal.
B. The Plaintiffs’ Eligibility for Fees
1. Standard of Review
When reviewing attorneys’ fees under § 1988, we review de novo the district court’s “purely legal conclusions.”
Palmetto Props., Inc. v. County of Du-Page,
375 F.3d 542, 547 (7th Cir.2004),
cert. denied,
— U.S. —, 125 S.Ct. 965, 160 L.Ed.2d 899 (2005). Thus, because in this case the Director has challenged whether the district court incorrectly applied the definition of a “prevailing party,” we shall review the district court’s conclusions de novo.
See id.
We review “factual matters underlying the fee award, such as the fee amount and a party’s ultimate litigation goals,” for clear error.
Id.
2. 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and “Prevailing Party” Status
In the United States, the parties to a lawsuit generally are required to bear their own costs.
Buckhannon,
532 U.S. at
602, 121 S.Ct. 1835. However, in 42 U.S.C. § 1988, Congress has vested courts with “discretion” to award “a reasonable attorney’s fee” to a “prevailing party” other than the United States “in any action or proceeding to enforce” a number of civil rights statutes, including 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Thus, “[a] plaintiff must be a prevailing party to recover an attorney’s fee under § 1988.”
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
461 U.S. 424, 433, 103 S.Ct. 1933, 76 L.Ed.2d 40 (1983).
The Supreme Court has given us guidance on what it means to prevail for the purposes of § 1988. To be considered a prevailing party, one must have “prevailed on the merits of at least some of his claims.”
Hanrahan v. Hampton,
446 U.S. 754, 758, 100 S.Ct. 1987, 64 L.Ed.2d 670 (1980). Thus, the Court has held that a litigant is a prevailing party when he has obtained a judgment on the merits, a settlement agreement enforced through a consent decree or some other “judicially sanctioned change in the legal relationship of the parties.”
Buckhannon,
532 U.S. at 605, 121 S.Ct. 1835;
see also Palmetto Props., Inc.,
375 F.3d at 548. “[A]t a minimum, to be considered a prevailing party within the meaning of § 1988, the plaintiff must be able to point to the resolution of a dispute which changes the legal relationship between itself and the defendant.”
Texas State Teachers Ass’n v. Garland Indep. Sch. Dist. (“Garland”),
489 U.S. 782, 792, 109 S.Ct. 1486, 103 L.Ed.2d 866 (1989).
Of particular import to this case is the question of at what point before the entry of final judgment the “judicially sanctioned change” in the parties’ relationship can be said to have taken place, thus making an award of attorneys’ fees appropriate. Certainly, as we have explained, “[a] district court has the power to award fees before the entry of a final judgment.”
Palmer,
806 F.2d at 1320. According to the Supreme Court, “[i]t is evident ... that Congress contemplated the award of fees
pendente lite
in some cases.”
Hanrahan,
446 U.S. at 757, 100 S.Ct. 1987. However, the Court has emphasized that “Congress intended to permit the interim award of counsel fees only when a party has prevailed on the merits of at least some of his claims.”
Id.
at 758, 100 S.Ct. 1987. In other words, “[a] prevailing party must be one who has succeeded on any significant claim affording it some of the relief sought,
either pendente lite
or at the conclusion of the litigation.”
Garland,
489 U.S. at 791, 109 S.Ct. 1486 (emphasis added). We have interpreted the Supreme Court’s decisions on interim fee awards to mean that, “[o]nce a plaintiff obtains substantive relief that is not defeasible by further proceedings, he can seek interim fees and the district court has the power to award them.”
Richardson v. Penfold,
900 F.2d 116, 119 (7th Cir.1990).
3. This Court’s Precedents
Several of our cases provide examples of the circumstances in which an interim award of attorneys’ fees is appropriate or in which an attorneys’ fee award should be upheld despite a lack of a final judgment in a case.
a.
In
Young v. City of Chicago,
202 F.3d 1000 (7th Cir.2000), we upheld an award of attorneys’ fees that had been made based only on a preliminary injunction. The plaintiffs in
Young
had obtained a preliminary injunction against the City of Chicago. The plaintiffs alleged that the City had violated their First Amendment rights by establishing a security perimeter excluding protesters from the areas around the site of the 1996 Democratic National Convention. The City’s appeal, taken af
ter the conclusion of the convention, was dismissed as moot (the injunction applied only to that specific convention), and the merits of the case never were decided. After this court had dismissed the City’s appeal, the plaintiffs moved for, and were awarded, attorneys’ fees pursuant to § 1988. We upheld the award despite the fact that a final judgment on the merits had not been entered. We reasoned that “[a] defendant cannot defeat a plaintiffs right to attorneys’ fees by taking steps to moot the case after the plaintiff has obtained the relief he sought, for in such a case mootness does not alter a plaintiffs status as a prevailing party.”
Id.
at 1000-01. In
Young,
the litigation manifestly had come to an end
despite
the lack of a final judgment on the merits. Furthermore, our decision in
Young
clearly was connected closely to our impression that the City deliberately had “waited until the convention was over” in order to moot the case “before a definitive determination of its merits.”
Id.
at 1000.
b.
In
Palmetto Properties,
375 F.3d 542, we upheld an award of attorneys’ fees that had been made in a case in which no final judgment had been entered. The plaintiffs sued DuPage County, Illinois, on the basis of a local ordinance that the plaintiffs claimed violated the First Amendment by restricting possible locations for their planned adult-entertainment nightclub. The district court granted partial summary judgment for the plaintiffs, declaring a part of the challenged ordinance unconstitutional. After summary judgment, the County offered to repeal the unconstitutional portions of its ordinance, and the district court continued the case to allow the repeal to take place, ultimately dismissing the case as moot.
Following dismissal, the plaintiffs sought attorneys’ fees pursuant to § 1988. We upheld the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees despite the fact that an entry of final judgment had not been made. We explained:
It would defy reason and contradict the definition of “prevailing party” under
Buckhannon
and our subsequent precedent to hold that simply because the district court abstained from entering a final order formally closing the case — a result of the Defendant’s assertions that it would repeal the challenged portion of the ordinance — Palmetto somehow did not obtain a “judicially sanctioned change” in the parties’ legal relationship .... In this case, not only did the district court make a substantive determination as to essentially all the constitutional claims save one, ... the County repealed the ordinance only
after
that determination had been made and presumably
because of it ....
[Tjheir action is most persuasively construed as involuntary' — indeed exhibiting judicial imprimatur.
Id.
at 549-50 (emphasis in original). Thus, in
Palmetto Properties,
attorneys’ fees were appropriate because the court had reached a judgment on the merits as to some of the plaintiffs’ claims, even though the procedural step of entering final judgment had not been used.
c.
In
Balark v. City of Chicago,
81 F.3d 658 (7th Cir.1996), we affirmed an award of attorneys’ fees to parties who had done the work of obtaining and maintaining a consent decree, even after the decree ultimately was vacated. In the litigation that led to
Balark,
the district court had granted the plaintiffs partial summary judgment on their claims and had enjoined the City from continuing its practice of paying tort judgments of $1000 or less immediately
while delaying payment of larger tort judgments for several years. This court substantially affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment in
Evans v. City of Chicago (“Evans I”),
689 F.2d 1286 (7th Cir.1982),
overruled, by Evans v. City of Chicago (“Evans II”),
873 F.2d 1007 (7th Cir.1989). Following our
Evans I
decision, the City and the plaintiffs negotiated a consent decree requiring the City to pay all judgments promptly and in the order in which they were entered. As events unfolded, a series of appeals caused this court to question, reconsider and eventually overrule
Evans I.
Ultimately, we determined that the consent decree could not stand.
See Evans v. City of Chicago (“Evans III”),
10 F.3d 474 (7th Cir.1993). Following
Evans III,
the district court denied the plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees pursuant to § 1988.
We overruled
Evans I
on the ground that the plaintiffs had been prevailing parties within the meaning of the fee-shifting statute. Even though the protracted litigation had ended unfavorably to the plaintiffs, the City had signed the consent decree (which remained in place for a decade) and “the decree became the equivalent of a judicial decree once the district court entered it.”
Balark,
81 F.3d at 665. Thus, the suit had been subject to a “conclusion of [a] portion of the litigation through the entry of a consent decree.”
Id.
At .the time we decided the plaintiffs’ eligibility for fees in
Balark,
the Supreme Court had established that a party could attain prevailing party status through a consent decree and settlement.
See Maher v. Gagne,
448 U.S. 122, 129, 100 S.Ct. 2570, 65 L.Ed.2d 653 (1980).
The court declined to take an
“ex post
view of all consent decrees” and stated that it would not “deny attorney’s fees whenever subsequent events cause a court to set [a] decree aside.”
Balark,
81 F.3d at 665. Indeed, we emphasized that “[t]he only possible perspective from which the entitlement to fees can be considered is at the time the final judgment determining who prevails is entered.”
Id.
Thus, in
Balark,
the plaintiffs were entitled to an award of fees because they had obtained a consent decree that was the equivalent, for § 1988 purposes, of a judgment on the merits.
With the foregoing principles in mind, we now shall consider whether the plaintiffs in this case appropriately may be termed prevailing parties eligible for an award of attorneys’ fees.
4. Application to this Case
The Director contends that the preliminary injunction was not a final determination on the merits of any claims. He also submits that, because it is not clear what the district court’s ultimate decision will be, it will be impossible to determine prevailing party status until the district court has entered final relief. The plaintiffs, on the other hand, assert that
Dupuy I
constituted a determination on the merits of at least some of their claims.
See
Appellees’ Br. at 26 (“[T]he district court made unqualified merits rulings,
not
preliminary relief resting on the provisional assessment of ‘reasonable likelihood of success on the merits.’ ”) (emphasis in original). For instance, they contend that, by noting its “find[ing] that certain ... current DCFS policies and procedures do in fact deprive class members of constitutionally-protected rights,”
Dupuy I,
141 F.Supp.2d at 1092, the district court made a determination of the merits of their due process
claim. The defendants respond that there has been no determination on the merits because the district court never consolidated the hearing on the preliminary injunction with the trial on the merits.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a)(2).
Although certain language in the district court’s fee order can be read to suggest that the court had adopted a particular view of the merits of the case, when the writings of the district court are read in their totality, we cannot say that they make it sufficiently clear that the court had resolved any aspect of the case in a sufficiently “concrete and irreversible” way as to warrant an interim attorneys’ fee award. In the fee award, the district court indicated that “[pjlaintiffs have ... made substantial efforts to reach the merits of the disputes between the parties, [and] have presented testimony and evidence over several days at two lengthy hearings that functioned as bench trials.” R.584 at 5. The court also expressed its belief that there would be no “lengthy further proceedings before entry of a final judgment.”
Id.
Notably, however, the court stopped significantly short of deciding definitively any aspect of the case. Although the district court expressed the expectation that the remaining proceedings would not be lengthy, it also made it clear that there was still work to be done.
An examination of the district court’s earlier writings, when it granted the preliminary injunction, makes even more clear that definitive resolution of the chief aspects of the case had not been attained. The court worked extensively with the parties in a commendable and painstaking process to craft the terms of the preliminary injunction. At the same time, it never went so far as to decide on the terms of the definitive remedy. For instance, referring to the pre-deprivation administrative conference, the court expressed a willingness “to revisit the matter if history proves the conferences ineffective at addressing the error rate which troubled the court.” R.443 at 12. In dealing with the matter of delay, the court indicated that it was “unwilling at this time to impose Plaintiffs’ proposed remedy of expungement.”
Id.
at 16. Most importantly, referring to the plaintiffs’ additional requests for relief, the court denied without prejudice the proposals “[a]bsent agreement between the parties or a fully developed record.”
Id.
at 18.
In our own review of the preliminary injunction proceedings, we took note of the still unstable state of the record and of the relief when we noted that the suit was at a
“preliminary stage of the litigation.”
Dupuy III,
397 F.3d at 506. Indeed, our own review of the preliminary injunction left work for the district court.
See id.
at 512 (extending preliminary injunction to provide pre-deprivation process to “career entrants,” directing district court to modify injunction accordingly and instructing district court to define more precisely the class of persons who qualify as “career entrants”). Our decision certainly clarified the governing principles of law and gave the district court guidance on the legal framework in which further proceedings ought to take place. In that respect, our opinion, combined with the work of the district court that we approve, perhaps can be said to have settled a “central issue” of law.
See Garland,
489 U.S. at 790, 109 S.Ct. 1486. We did not, however, deal with this case in terms that made the plaintiffs a “prevailing party” as that term is employed in attorneys’ fee awards litigation.
We must conclude, therefore, that the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees, even on an interim basis, was premature. We pause to point out, however, that our decision today does not establish a hard and fast rule that a preliminary injunction can never be an adequate predicate for such an interim award. Indeed, in
Young,
we upheld an award granted to a party that had obtained only a preliminary injunction. That case, however, was significantly different from this case. In
Young,
the plaintiffs had obtained a preliminary injunction, and the case was mooted
before
they sought attorneys’ fees. The relief the plaintiffs had obtained through the preliminary injunction therefore was not defeasi-ble for the same reason that the case was moot: The sole event covered by the injunction, the 1996 Democratic National Convention, had ended. In the present case, by contrast, at the time the district court issued the fee order, it explicitly contemplated further proceedings on the merits of the plaintiffs’ claims.
We have recognized that there is a difference, for the purpose of awarding attorneys’ fees under § 1988, between cases in which a preliminary injunction is vacated as moot and other cases involving a preliminary injunction. In fact, in
Palmer,
we rejected the idea that any “plaintiff who has won a preliminary injunction has won something even if the injunction is reversed” and noted that “constraining] the defendants’ conduct until [the injunction] is reversed” is not sufficient to confer prevailing status on a party.
Palmer,
806 F.2d at 1321-22.
Furthermore,
Balark
and
Palmetto Properties
also are distinguishable from the present case because the plaintiffs in those two cases had secured exactly the kind of relief which the Supreme Court has indicated leads to prevailing party status. The plaintiffs in
Palmetto Properties
had received partial summary judgment and the plaintiffs in
Balark
were parties to a consent decree; the Supreme Court in
Buckhannon
explicitly recognized that these two forms of resolution change the “legal relationship” between the parties and also carry the “judicial
imprimatur”
necessary to confer prevailing party status.
Buckhannon,
532 U.S. at 604-05, 121 S.Ct. 1835. In
Balark
and
Palmetto Properties,
the grant of summary judgment and the entry of a consent decree represented the
“resolution of
a dispute which change[d] the legal relationship between [the plaintiff] and the defendant.”
Garland,
489 U.S. at 792, 109 S.Ct. 1486 (emphasis added). No such resolution was reached in the present case.
In short, the plaintiffs have not brought to our attention any case in which we have affirmed an award of attorneys’ fees that was made at a procedural point similar to the point at which the award was made in this case: when a preliminary injunction
has been entered and affirmed on appeal but still further proceedings on the merits clearly are contemplated.
Therefore, we must conclude that our case law does not permit the award of fees that was made by the district court.
We also think that it is worth pointing out that the district court’s fee order suggests that, at the time that it entered the fee order, the court misapprehended, perhaps due to the parties’ own representations, the nature and extent of the parties’ challenges to the preliminary injunction. The court noted that, although it had “not reviewed the briefs on appeal,” it understood that the Director’s cross-appeal did “not challenge the preliminary injunction in all respects, but argue[d] that some of the schedules imposed by the injunction are unworkable.” R.584 at 4. In fact, the Director’s challenge to the preliminary injunction concerned more central aspects of the injunction than the timetables for hearings.
See Dupuy III,
397 F.3d at 501 (noting the Director’s contentions on appeal).
We are mindful of the extreme outlay of expenses that this case has required of the plaintiffs.
Cf. Bradley v. Sch. Bd. of City of Richmond,
416 U.S. 696, 723, 94 S.Ct. 2006, 40 L.Ed.2d 476 (1974) (recognizing that, in some circumstances, “[t]o delay a fee award until the entire litigation is concluded” may be to “work substantial hardship on plaintiffs and their counsel”). Nonetheless, the case law of the Supreme Court and of this court simply does not permit an interim award of attorneys’ fees to be made at the point in the litigation at which this award was made.
We trust that the parties will cooperate fully with the district court to bring this litigation to a prompt end.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we must reverse the award of attorneys’ fees assessed against the Director.
REVERSED.