Close up of a man holding a smartphone with the Amazon logo displayed, representing the Amazon Prime cancellation lawsuits.
(Photo Credit: Diego Thomazini/Shutterstock)

Amazon lawsuits overview: 

  • Who: Arizona Attorney General Kristin K. Mayes filed a pair of lawsuits against Amazon.com.
  • Why: Mayes claims that Amazon made canceling Prime an unnecessarily difficult process and unfairly favored some retailers over others, Mayes claimed.
  • Where: The Amazon lawsuits were filed in Maricopa County Superior Court.

Arizona Attorney General Kristin K. Mayes filed a pair of lawsuits against Amazon.com claiming the company unfairly favored some retailers and unnecessarily made Amazon Prime cancellation difficult under policies that are no longer in effect.

Amazon referred to its complex Prime cancellation process as “Project Iliad” and used it to cut cancellations by 17% between its 2016 launch and 2017. The complex process was not changed until April 2023.

“This layered and confusing cancellation process relied on ‘dark patterns,’ i.e., methods of deception derived from behavioral psychology that exploit cognitive biases to influence and manipulate consumer choices,” the Amazon Prime cancellation lawsuit says.

The cancellation process included at least six steps, including offers for a lower price, warnings about losing discounts and benefits and triangles with warning notes and a series of confusing other options to choose from, the lawsuit says.

Lawsuit claims Amazon cancellation process violates Arizona anti-fraud law

Amazon’s alleged favoring of certain retailers violates the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act, the lawsuit says.

Amazon chooses one product for the “Buy Box” after a customer search, giving the indication that option is the best option for a consumer. But that isn’t always true, the lawsuit claims —  the algorithm allegedly favors Amazon first-party retail offers or offers from third-party sellers who participate in Fulfillment By Amazon.

Nearly 98% of the purchases on Amazon come from the “Buy Box,” the lawsuit says.

“The result is that consumers routinely overpay for items that are available at lower prices from other sellers on Amazon – not because consumers don’t care about price, or because they’re making informed purchasing decisions, but because Amazon has chosen to display the offers for which it will earn the highest fees,” the Amazon lawsuit claims.

Another lawsuit alleging that Amazon.com intentionally makes it hard to cancel Amazon Prime memberships was filed in federal court in Washington in November 2022.

Have you had difficulty canceling an Amazon Prime subscription? Let us know in the comments.

The Amazon Prime cancellation lawsuits are State of Arizona, ex rel., Kristin K. Mayes, Attorney General v. Amazon.com Inc., Case Nos. unknown, in the Superior Court in the State of Arizona in and for the County of Maricopa.


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99 thoughts onArizona AG files lawsuit over ’deceptive’ Amazon Prime cancellation process

  1. Anthony G says:

    Add me.

  2. K Johnson says:

    My household expenses started going up this year, so I took the scissors to my subscriptions. Amazon is like cutting out an ingrown toenail, I gave up. And to date eventhough I don’t use the prime account, I’m still paying for it. Six months later, I just can’t cancel it.

    1. Chuck says:

      Was charged for 3 years before they caused an overdraft and we noticed. Refunded us for 1 year and only canceled because they got caught.

  3. Stacey k says:

    Please add me if Ca. Residents count

    1. Catrina Williams says:

      i canceled my prime several times but was charged anyway for over a year every two weeks they tried to bill me for prime even after canceling it and it took me over 6 months before they actually canceled it but continued to bill me until i closed my account and removed my payment card from it

  4. Michelle L Moore says:

    I have to make sure my card does not stay on file just to make sure they can’t charge me when I can’t afford to pay them because they would not let me cancel my membership

  5. Alison Coppock says:

    I had major issues canceling Prime. We also ended up paying for two me,berships because we couldn’t cancel the one when we signed up for the military offer.

  6. Jane says:

    I never signed up for Prime but I did order from Amazon. I learned (unbeknownst to
    me) that there were 4 Prime accounts associated with the credit card I used on Amazon. I am a former banker and I said, that should have been your first clue there was fraud.. The accented person at the call center (when I caught the fraud) said No, that’s common then accused me of passing around my credit card like Halloween candy. I said “that never happened.” I cancelled both my credit card and my Amazon account, I’ll NEVER do business with them again.

  7. Audrey White says:

    please add me.

  8. Peggy Pollock says:

    Back in 2018 I tried to cancel subscription and Amazon never cancelled it and I gave up going back and forth with them. It’s hard to talk to an American on the phone. Always someone on them African islands and they lie they will cancel it and they never do.

  9. Lawrence Higgins says:

    Yes I most definitely have please add

  10. Brian Whitehead says:

    Its almost impossible even today. I have several active subscriptions. Its terrible

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