Tech News
← Back to articles

How to Get a Refund From the $1.5 Billion Amazon Prime Settlement

read original related products more articles

The Federal Trade Commission took Amazon to court early last week. Only two days after the trial started, Amazon caved in to sign a $2.5 billion settlement.

At the heart of the lawsuit was the Amazon Prime subscription program. The FTC claimed that Amazon tricked millions of customers into signing up for a Prime membership using deceptive design techniques and then made the cancellation process onerously difficult.

The $2.5 billion settlement is made up of a $1 billion civil penalty paid to the government, the largest ever involving an FTC rule violation, and $1.5 billion in refunds to affected consumers, the second-highest restitution award ever obtained by the FTC.

“Today, we are putting billions of dollars back into Americans’ pockets, and making sure Amazon never does this again,” FTC Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson said in a press release.

“Amazon and our executives have always followed the law and this settlement allows us to move forward and focus on innovating for customers,” Amazon spokesperson Mark Blafkin told Gizmodo.

The FTC estimates that roughly 35 million consumers were impacted by this scheme. Chances are, you could be one of the 35 million, and you could be eligible to benefit from the refunds totaling a record-breaking $1.5 billion.

Who’s eligible?

For starters, you have to be a customer in the United States who signed up for an Amazon Prime membership or unsuccessfully tried to cancel an existing Prime subscription some time between June 23, 2019, and June 23, 2025.

But even then, you had to have signed up via what the FTC calls a “challenged enrollment flow,” aka a misleading enrollment page. According to the FTC, you are eligible for a claims payout if you signed up for a Prime membership via the shipping option selection page (that is, if you clicked to have free shipping without realizing that meant registering for a Prime membership), Prime Video, or any versions of the Universal Prime Decision Page or Amazon’s single page checkout.

The first set of payouts will be made automatically within 90 days of the FTC order. If you signed up for an Amazon Prime membership using the challenged enrollment flow and used no more than three Prime benefits within any 12-month period of your enrollment, then you will be automatically qualified for a payout. Prime benefits do include free, expedited shipping unless the transaction at hand would have already included that speed of shipping for free without a Prime membership.

... continue reading