Instacart agrees to $60 million FTC settlement for refunds

The Federal Trade Commission announced that Instacart will refund $60 million to subscribers as part of a settlement over deceptive practices. The agreement addresses allegations of misleading claims about delivery fees and satisfaction guarantees. Instacart denies wrongdoing but will implement changes to its marketing and refund processes.

On December 19, 2025, the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) revealed a settlement with Instacart, requiring the grocery delivery app to pay $60 million in refunds to affected subscribers. The deal resolves a lawsuit accusing the company of using unlawful tactics that harmed consumers and increased grocery shopping costs.

The FTC alleged that Instacart misled users with claims of "free delivery," when service fees of up to 15 percent actually applied—fees not charged for pickup orders and described as essentially delivery costs in disguise. Additionally, the company's "100 percent satisfaction guaranteed" promise was problematic, as customers facing late deliveries or poor service often received only small credits rather than full refunds. The agency claimed Instacart hid full refund options from its self-service problem-reporting menu, causing many to accept credits for future orders instead.

"Instacart pocketed tens of millions of dollars by failing to honor its promise of 100 percent consumer satisfaction," the FTC stated in its complaint. The refunds target subscribers automatically charged after free trials without adequate notice, with funds to be transferred to the FTC within 14 days of court approval. The settlement, lasting 10 years, mandates an end to such deceptive marketing.

Instacart, in a blog post, admitted no wrongdoing and chose to settle to "move forward." The company defended its practices, noting that it distinguishes service fees as a separate itemized line and sends email reminders before charging renewals. It highlighted a five-day window for full refunds if services went unused and emphasized overall savings for users, estimating $3 billion saved through deals and an average of $5 per order. "We flatly deny any allegations of wrongdoing by the agency, and we believe the foundation of the FTC’s inquiry was fundamentally flawed," Instacart said.

The FTC countered that "hundreds of thousands of consumers have been charged membership fees without receiving benefits from the membership or getting refunds." Under the agreement, the agencies will collaborate to identify and compensate affected customers.

관련 기사

Adobe and DOJ representatives shake hands over $75M settlement checks for subscription cancellation lawsuit, with improved cancellation screens in background.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Adobe settles lawsuit over difficult subscription cancellations

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Adobe has agreed to a $75 million settlement with the US Department of Justice to resolve a 2024 lawsuit alleging that the company made it hard for customers to cancel subscriptions. The deal includes another $75 million in free services for qualifying customers. Adobe denies any wrongdoing but says it has improved its processes.

The Federal Trade Commission has expanded its lawsuit against Uber by adding 21 states and the District of Columbia, accusing the company of deceptive practices related to its Uber One subscription service. The allegations include charging customers without consent and making cancellations overly complicated. Uber strongly denies the claims, asserting that its processes are straightforward and compliant with the law.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Google has reached a settlement with Epic Games to resolve their long-running antitrust dispute, paving the way for Fortnite's return to the Google Play Store worldwide. The agreement includes reduced fees for developers and support for third-party app stores on Android. Changes are set to roll out starting in June in select regions.

New York City has filed a lawsuit against delivery app Motoclick and its CEO, alleging illegal fees and other violations of the city’s delivery worker pay rules that the city says amount to millions of dollars in stolen wages and damages. City officials say they are seeking to shut the company down and are warning other delivery platforms ahead of new worker-protection laws taking effect January 26, 2026.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Building on yesterday's Ninth Circuit decision upholding Apple's contempt violation in the Epic Games iOS payments case, the court detailed the tech giant's breaches while permitting reasonable security fees. Epic CEO Tim Sweeney declared the 'Apple Tax' dead in the US, but highlighted developers' fears of retaliation.

A Tesla Cybertruck owner known as Ashley has ordered a second vehicle for $110,000 to surprise her skeptical husband, citing her positive experience after overcoming initial hesitations with Full Self-Driving (FSD). This decision comes just before Tesla's February 14, 2026, deadline to end the $8,000 one-time FSD purchase in favor of a $99 monthly subscription. Ashley's story highlights a contrast between online negativity and real-world owner satisfaction.

AI에 의해 보고됨

A federal judge in Miami has rejected Tesla's attempt to overturn a $243 million jury verdict related to a 2019 fatal crash involving the company's Autopilot system. The ruling upholds the decision from a trial that found the evidence strongly supported the verdict. This decision exhausts Tesla's options at the trial court level amid ongoing lawsuits over its driver-assistance technology.

 

 

 

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부