Amazon agreed to a $2.5 billion settlement with the Federal Trade Commission over how it signed people up for Prime and how hard it made canceling. Part of that money, $1.5 billion, is going back to customers as refunds of up to $51. Some people were already paid automatically. Others have to file a claim, and that claim window is open now but closes in 2026.
This guide explains who gets paid, who needs to file, how to do it on the official site, and how to spot the scams that have appeared around it. The settlement details here come from the FTC's official refund page and the official settlement site.
The FTC alleged that Amazon used dark patterns to enroll millions of people in automatically renewing Prime subscriptions without clear consent, and then made canceling unnecessarily difficult, in violation of the Restore Online Shoppers Confidence Act and the FTC Act. Amazon settled in September 2025 without admitting wrongdoing. The deal totals $2.5 billion: $1.5 billion in refunds to affected customers and a $1 billion civil penalty. As part of it, Amazon also has to disclose Prime terms clearly before taking payment and offer a simple cancellation that uses the same method you used to sign up.
Many people did not have to do anything. Amazon sent automatic payments to customers who signed up through one of the challenged enrollment flows and used no more than three Prime benefits in any 12-month period. Those payments went out between November 12 and December 24, 2025, by PayPal, Venmo, or mailed check. If you got one, you are done. For PayPal or Venmo payments you generally need to accept within about 15 days, and mailed checks should be cashed within about 60 days. Getting this refund does not cancel your Prime membership.
You are in the claims group, which has to file, if all of the following are true:
The "challenged enrollment flows" named in the case included the Universal Prime Decision Page, the Shipping Option Select Page, the Prime Video enrollment flow, and the Single Page Checkout.
Claims are submitted under penalty of perjury, and false claims take money from people who are actually eligible. If you are not sure you qualify, read the FAQ on the official settlement site before filing.
Eligible filers were sent a notice by email or mail, postmarked by late January 2026, with a Claim ID and a PIN. Check your inbox, your spam folder, and your mail.
File at subscriptionmembershipsettlement.com. Do not file through any other site or link that arrives by text or DM.
These come from your notice. Without them you generally cannot file, so locate the notice first.
You can choose PayPal, Venmo, or a mailed check.
You have 180 days from the date on your notice, and the exact deadline is printed on it. Reported deadlines cluster in late July 2026, so do not wait.
The settlement is real, but scammers are impersonating it. The legitimate process never asks you to pay a fee, and it never asks for your Social Security number or your Amazon login or password. If any message asks for those, it is a scam. File only at the official settlement site, and ignore links that arrive by text message or social media DM. The settlement administrator's support contact is admin@SubscriptionMembershipSettlement.com.
Payments are capped at $51 and are based on the total Prime fees you paid, so some people receive less, occasionally under a dollar. After you submit a claim, Amazon has 30 days to review it, and payment follows shortly after approval. The FTC estimates roughly 35 million consumers were affected by the enrollment and cancellation practices at issue.
Taking a settlement refund does not cancel your membership or change your Amazon account in any way. If you actually want to cancel Prime, do it separately. One upside of the settlement is that Amazon is now required to offer an easier cancellation, so the process is simpler than the one the FTC complained about. Our step-by-step guide to canceling Amazon Prime walks through it, including when you keep access until the end of the cycle and when you can get a refund.
If your situation is that you tried to cancel and kept getting charged, that is also what this settlement was about. See what to do when you are still being charged after canceling, and if you need to claw back specific charges, our dispute letter generator and chargeback guide cover that.