Having a hard time cancelling your Uber One subscription?Watch The Uncanny Counter (2020) Online The U.S. government says you're not alone.
On Monday, the Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuitagainst the delivery and rideshare giant Uber alleging that the company partook in "deceptive billing and cancellation practices." The FTC's allegations are in regards to Uber's premium subscription service, Uber One.
“I looked at a credit card bill and I realized that Uber Eats had been charging $9.99 for an Uber One account for the past 8 months. I have never signed up for this service,” reads a typical customer comment cited in the suit. Another customer complaint reads, “I don[’]t have an UBER account and NEVER have but I am being charged a monthly recurring fee of $9.99 for UBER ONE . I don[’]t even know how they got my debit card info.”
Uber advertised Uber One as a $9.99 per month premium subscription platform that provided customers with exclusive benefits, such as savings on rides and deliveries. However, according to the FTC, Uber mislead consumers on what exactly those savings were.
“Americans are tired of getting signed up for unwanted subscriptions that seem impossible to cancel,” said FTC Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson in a statement. “Today, we’re alleging that Uber not only deceived consumers about their subscriptions, but also made it unreasonably difficult for customers to cancel.”
For example, Uber advertised that customers could save $25 per month as an Uber One member. The FTC disagrees, and the suit shows that the company didn't factor in the $9.99 per month membership fee when advertising supposed savings.
"These claims are false," the government's lawsuit says. "Many consumers do not actually save $25 a month by using Uber One…Uber’s savings claim assumes that the subscription is free; the purported savings does not subtract any costs."
The problems with Uber One went beyond false advertising promises, however. According to the lawsuit, along with the $25 in savings, Uber advertised that users can cancel their Uber One subscription "at any time" with "no additional fees." However, the FTC stated that Uber often charged consumers before the free trial even ended. On top of that, cancelling the subscription wasn't as simple as advertised.
The suit alleges that Uber deploys deceptive practices known as "dark patterns" to first encourage users to sign up and then discourage them from cancelling their Uber One subscriptions.
In the app, buttons directing users to “Start saving” or “Try for free” automatically enrolled users in the trial, per the lawsuit. In one case, users were presented with two options, “Start saving” or “Cancel.” The government’s complaint reads, “Once consumers click ‘Start saving,’ they are immediately enrolled in Uber One and will be charged every month or year for a subscription. The only other choice is to ‘Cancel.’ It is unclear what tapping that button would cancel at this point — it could be the delivery or ride they are trying to book; they have not signed up for Uber One and thus could not cancel it."
And in practice, when customers really did try to cancel the subscription, "Uber makes it extremely difficult," the FTC notes.
The FTC says Uber users were "forced to navigate" through a maze of steps in order to cancel their paid Uber One plan. The FTC says that the cancellation process could extend over 23 different screensand force users totake up to 32 different actionsjust to cancel. And the closer a user got to the end of their current subscription, the harder Uber made it to cancel.
"Uber can require them to say why they want to cancel, urge them to pause their membership or, if that failed, present them with offers to stay," says the FTC.
Some customers were forced to contact Uber customer support in order to cancel, but were not provided a method to contact the company. In addition, many users were charged for the subscription while in the process of cancelling, according to the government.
The FTC is charging Uber with five counts under Section 5 of the FTC Act and the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act (ROSCA), including misrepresentation and unfairly charging without consent.
In a statement shared with Mashable, Uber disputes any wrongdoing.
"We are disappointed that the FTC chose to move forward with this action, but are confident that the courts will agree with what we already know: Uber One’s sign-up and cancellation processes are clear, simple, and follow the letter and spirit of the law," said an Uber spokesperson. "Uber does not sign up or charge consumers without their consent, and cancellations can now be done anytime in-app and take most people 20 seconds or less."
Uber said that the company used to require that consumers contact the company in order to cancel Uber One if they were within 48 hours of their renewal period. However, Uber has since changed this policy and users can now cancel their subscription from within the app at any time.
Topics Uber Politics
Trump boarded Air Force One with toilet paper stuck to his shoeBrett Kavanaugh protesters occupy the steps of the U.S. CapitolForget 'Jurassic World: Dominion' — 'Prehistoric Planet' is mustChaotic photos from the UK's annual cheese rolling contestHow Hulu's 'Conversations with Friends' differs from the bookTheresa May's awkward dancing has become an inevitable memeProtesters shine torches, lights onto the Sydney Opera HouseTwitter user named Brett Kavanagh kicks off an impromptu support groupProtesters shine torches, lights onto the Sydney Opera HouseHere's how to turn on the Apple Watch 4's Fall Detection featureWordle today: Here's the answer, hints for June 5An etiquette expert weighs in: When do you remind someone about an unpaid Venmo request?Hands on with the Dyson Airwrap styler'The Office': Why Jim and Pam named their baby Cece4 things we want to fix about 'Stranger Things 4'Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for June 7Trump boarded Air Force One with toilet paper stuck to his shoeSupremely weird 'interview' with Drew Barrymore goes viral for all the wrong reasonsThis perfect song reminds us why it's not such a scary time for boysNew European Union agreement could compel Apple to switch from Lightning to USB Cafe says it'll only hire women who don't wear makeup or smoke 'Glitter booty' is the latest bizarre beauty trend you've secretly always wanted Google is killing SMS support for Hangouts 'The Hate U Give' is required reading for this American moment One Direction's Liam Payne is officially a father Aaron Sorkin is just now discovering there's a diversity problem in Hollywood Tom Hardy reads another bedtime story, breaks the internet again Ignore this guy's dumbbell trick and check out the NBA star grandpa behind him Fox News celebrates Trump's weekend White House stay, except he was golfing The TIE lie: 'Rogue One' director admits trailer scene was never real It's official: Uber's Travis Kalanick and Emil Michael are actually the worst Chance the Rapper sat in on a third grade math class and it looked really fun, TBH Campus security guard graduates with distinction from the college he was working at From Buzzfeed to Watcher, how Ryan Bergara built a career on ghosts Please forgive Ed Sheeran for forgetting the words to his own song in front of the entire world Possibly evil mass death of zoo snakes leads to investigation Alex Jones got relentlessly mocked after this tweet about the Queen This weird gadget is the stupidest thing to ever happen to flirting This is the language that an Uber recruiter used to discuss its sexism problem Now that SXSW is over, here was, for sure, my favorite part
2.1568s , 10154.8046875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch The Uncanny Counter (2020) Online】,Exquisite Information Network