Amazon has agreed to a $2.5 billion settlement to resolve claims by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission that its Prime subscription practices misled consumers and made cancellation overly difficult. Under the deal:
- $1 billion is designated as a civil penalty.
- $1.5 billion is allocated for consumer refunds.
Who Can Get a Refund?
Refund eligibility depends on how and when a user signed up for Prime, and how many benefits they actually used.
- Some users will qualify for automatic refunds—those who enrolled through certain promotional flows and used no more than three Prime benefits in any 12-month period. These users may receive up to $51.
- Others—such as those who tried to cancel but failed, or who used slightly more than the threshold—will need to file claims to receive compensation.
Timeline & Claim Process
- Amazon is required to issue automatic refunds within 90 days of the settlement order.
- Eligible customers for the claim-based refunds will receive claim forms after the automatic disbursements are complete.
- Once a user gets a claim form, they’ll have 180 days to submit it via email, prepaid mail, or the settlement website.
- Amazon will review each claim and respond within 30 days.
Changes Amazon Must Make
Besides paying fines and refunds, Amazon must reform its subscription and cancellation procedures. Key obligations include:
- Clearly offering users the option to decline Prime at signup.
- Disclosing all relevant terms and costs of the Prime subscription.
- Making the cancellation process as easy as the original signup method.
- Bringing in an independent third-party monitor to oversee compliance.
The settlement resolves ongoing litigation and marks one of the largest consumer restitution orders imposed by the FTC in recent years.