Emily Sortor  |  June 20, 2018

Category: Consumer News

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Experian’s trial membership is a trap because it cannot be easily canceled before further charges incur, according to a class action lawsuit.  

Plaintiff Nada Tadic claims that she signed up for a 7-day trial membership with Experian and ConsumerInfo.com, to check her credit scores.

Tadic says she was unable to easily cancel her membership at the end of seven days, and was then charged a monthly rate.

She claims that the company intentionally makes it very difficult for customers to cancel their 7-day trial memberships to be able to charge them more money.

The Experian class action lawsuit alleges that information on the CreditCheckTotal.com website, run by Experian and ConsumerInfo.com, advertises to consumers that “when you order your $1 3-Bureau Credit Report and FICO Scores, you will begin your 7-day trial membership…If you don’t cancel your membership within the 7-day trial period, you will be billed $29.95 for each month that you continue to use your membership. You may cancel your trial membership anytime within the trial period without charge.”

The Experian trial period charges class action lawsuit alleges that the company intentionally makes it very difficult for customers to cancel trial memberships.

Tadic claims that though the company makes it easy for customers to sign up for memberships on the website, the only way customers can cancel a membership is by calling a customer service line.

The Experian class action lawsuit states that when Tadic tried to cancel her membership over the phone during the 7-day trial period, she was put on hold indefinitely.

Allegedly, wait times for the customer service line are prohibitively long, making it almost impossible for customers to cancel their membership.

The Experian membership class action lawsuit claims that many customers had similar experiences, citing numerous online reviews that spoke of very long wait times, the inconvenience of the cancelation procedure, and the feeling that the company intentionally was deceptive to consumers.

Allegedly, many consumers were put on hold indefinitely. If they were given an estimate for the length of time that the hold would last, they were reportedly told that it could be anywhere between one and seven hours.

According to the Experian class action lawsuit, “ultimately, the consumers held on the line and were never able to speak to somebody to cancel the membership.”

In a few cases when consumers were able to speak to a customer service representative to request that their membership be canceled, consumers claim that a representative promised to cancel their membership but never did, causing them to continue to incur fees.

Tadic says the company severely inconveniences customers intentionally and knowingly scams consumers out of money that they would not have otherwise spent with the company.

She claims that their “chosen business model yields predictable results by encouraging and rewarding deceptive and other unlawful conduct.”

The Experian class action says Experian and ConsumerInfo.com engage in consumer fraud, deceptive sales practices, breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, fraudulent inducement, and unjust enrichment.

Tadic is represented by James F. McDonough III, Travis E. Lynch, W. Lewis Garrison, Chris B. Hood, and Jonathan R. Miller of Heninger Garrison Davis LLC.

The Experian Trial Period Charges Class Action Lawsuit is Nada Tadic v. Experian Information Solutions Inc., et al., Case 1:18-mi-99999-UNA, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division.

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180 thoughts onExperian Class Action Lawsuit Says 7-Day Trial Membership is a Trap

  1. VERONICA says:

    ADD ME TO THIS . This just happened to me last week and there is no way to cancel subscription

  2. Kay Whitfield says:

    I thought this was the for the credit bureu.

  3. Lynn Campbell says:

    Add me please

  4. C. Johnican says:

    This just happened to me last week, at first I thought it was my phone so I switched phones. After I switched phones I still had the same problem, called back many times that day, I spent nearly two hours trying to cancel the 7 day triall offer. When I finally got through, I complained about this, I was told they were having phone problems that day and was aware of the problem. I was finally able to get the trial offer canceled but, this was really beyond crazy. I left feeling like it was truly done on purpose.

  5. Barbara says:

    add me please

    1. Edward Armstrong says:

      No comment

  6. Alysha McDonald says:

    I would like to be included in this

  7. PeggyAnn Doak says:

    they pop up everywhere. I need to see my credit score and yet experian which I thought was a real company is a farce.

  8. Heather N Perez says:

    ADD ME

  9. Evelyn Ponton says:

    I need in on this they are terrible.

  10. Kelly stewart says:

    Lots of charges

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