Instacart settles with FTC over deceptive practices but faces separate investigation into prices
Briefly

Instacart settles with FTC over deceptive practices but faces separate investigation into prices
"The FTC said Thursday that Instacart has been falsely advertising free deliveries. The San Francisco-based company isn't clearly disclosing service fees, which add as much as 15% to an order and must be paid for customers to receive their groceries, the FTC said. Instacart has also failed to clearly disclose that customers who enroll in a free trial for its Instacart+ program will be charged membership fees at the end of the trial."
"The FTC said Instacart also advertises a "100% satisfaction guarantee," but customers who experience late deliveries or unprofessional service are typically only offered a small credit that can be used toward a future order and not a refund. "The FTC is focused on monitoring online delivery services to ensure that competitors are transparently competing on price and delivery terms," said Christopher Mufarrige, the director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection."
Instacart will pay $60 million in customer refunds under an FTC settlement addressing alleged deceptive practices. The FTC says Instacart falsely advertised free deliveries and did not clearly disclose service fees that can add as much as 15% to an order and are required for customers to receive groceries. The FTC also says Instacart failed to disclose that free trials of Instacart+ convert to paid memberships, leading hundreds of thousands to be charged without receiving membership benefits or refunds. Instacart denied wrongdoing but settled to move forward. The FTC is separately probing Instacart's pricing practices.
Read at AP News
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]