Adobe agrees to $150m settlement over hidden fees, cancellation hurdles

Accord includes a $75m civil penalty and $75m in free services for customers, and requires court approval

Must Read

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Adobe has agreed to a $150 million settlement to resolve a US government lawsuit alleging it concealed hefty subscription termination fees and made cancellations difficult, the Department of Justice said.

The accord includes a $75 million civil penalty and $75 million in free services for customers, and requires court approval.

Filed in June 2024 by the DoJ and FTC, the complaint accused Adobe of burying early-termination fees for its โ€œannual paid monthlyโ€ planโ€”sometimes hundreds of dollarsโ€”and steering customers through cumbersome online and phone cancellation processes.

Prosecutors said the practices violated the Restore Online Shoppersโ€™ Confidence Act, which requires clear disclosure of material terms and affirmative consumer consent for recurring charges. The settlement also resolves claims against two Adobe executives.

Adobe said it has streamlined and made its sign-up and cancellation flows more transparent, while denying wrongdoing. Subscriptions accounted for 97 per cent of Adobeโ€™s $6.4 billion revenue in the quarter ended February 27.

The settlement was announced a day after CEO Shantanu Narayen said he would step down after more than 18 years, amid investor concerns over how AI could affect Adobeโ€™s outlook.


Discover more from TechChannel News

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Memory crunch, supply constraints to drag down PC, tablet shipments

PC shipments expected to decline 11.3% in 2026, a steep downgrade from prior -2.4% outlook in November 2025

UAE to quintuple solar PV capacity to 32.3GW by 2035

Solar generation in UAE is projected to rise from 15.8TWh in 2025 to 75.4TWh by 2035, GlobalData says

Appleโ€™s MacBook Neo is most repairable notebook since 2014

iFixit finds Apple made key changes from its previous MacBooks
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

More Articles

- Advertisement -