Adobe pays $75 million to settle US lawsuit over termination fees, subscription cancellations

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Adobe said on Friday it will pay $75 million to resolve a US government lawsuit accusing the Photoshop and Acrobat maker of harming consumers by concealing ‌hefty termination ⁠fees and ⁠making it difficult to cancel subscriptions.

The San Jose, California-based company said it will also provide $75 million of free services to customers, in addition to making the $75 million payment to the US Department of Justice. Court approval is required.

In a June 2024 complaint, the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission accused Adobe of burying termination fees for its popular “annual paid monthly” subscription plan, sometimes reaching hundreds of dollars, ⁠in the ‌fine print or behind text boxes and hyperlinks.

They also said Adobe made cancelling subscriptions a hassle, forcing subscribers who wanted to cancel online ⁠to wade through numerous pages, and subscribers who wanted to cancel by phone to repeat themselves to multiple representatives and encounter “resistance and delay.”

Adobe was accused of violating the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act, a 2010 law barring merchants from imposing charges, including for automatic subscription renewals, without disclosing material terms clearly and obtaining customer consent.

In a statement on its website, Adobe said it has in recent years streamlined its sign-up and cancellation ‌processes and made them more transparent.