The news: Instacart agreed to pay $60 million in refunds to customers to settle Federal Trade Commission allegations that it used misleading enrollment and ad practices to raise costs for shoppers.
The agreement comes as Instacart is reportedly facing a separate FTC investigation into its pricing practices. A report earlier this month by Consumer Reports and Groundwork Collaborative found Instacart’s algorithm caused consumers to pay different prices for the same products in the same store.
The pattern: The FTC has been making efforts to crack down on what it characterizes as deceptive billing and enrollment practices.
Our take: The Instacart settlement highlights the limits of the FTC’s current enforcement approach. While the agency is increasingly aggressive in calling out what it deems is deceptive billing, enrollment, and pricing practices, its penalties still lack meaningful bite. Amazon’s Prime settlement, for example, amounted to just 5.6% of the company’s 2024 subscription revenues, while Instacart’s agreement equals roughly 6.4% of its Q3 revenues.
It is a promising sign for consumers that regulators are targeting opaque disclosures, auto-enrollment, and cancellation friction. But unless the consequences become more severe, these actions risk reinforcing a familiar incentive structure in which companies continue to push questionable practices until they are caught, settle, and move on.
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