Unsubscribe Act of 2021

12/31/2022, 5:28 AM

Unsubscribe Act of 2021

This bill requires that certain consumer protections are included in negative option agreements (an agreement under which a consumer's failure to take an affirmative action is considered approval to be charged for goods or services). These agreements are prohibited unless

  • the agreement discloses all material terms;
  • a consumer provides express informed consent before the consumer is charged for a product or the agreement is automatically renewed; and
  • the agreement provides the consumer with a way to cancel the agreement, in the same manner by which the agreement was entered, before incurring further or increased charges.

Further, under free-to-pay conversion contracts (a type of negative option agreement where a consumer is charged a nominal introductory rate and an increased rate after the introductory period ends), before charging a consumer the provider of the good or service must obtain the consumer's informed consent, provide the terms of the contract, and provide information about how to cancel the contract.

The bill also requires that certain notifications are provided to consumers in the context of other forms of negative option agreements online, such as notice between two and seven days before an automatic renewal.

The bill provides for enforcement of these requirements by the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general.

Congress
117

Number
S - 2072

Introduced on
2021-06-16

# Amendments
0

Sponsors
+5

Cosponsors
+5

Variations and Revisions

6/16/2021

Status of Legislation

Bill Introduced
Introduced to House
House to Vote
Introduced to Senate
Senate to Vote

Purpose and Summary

Unsubscribe Act of 2021

This bill requires that certain consumer protections are included in negative option agreements (an agreement under which a consumer's failure to take an affirmative action is considered approval to be charged for goods or services). These agreements are prohibited unless

  • the agreement discloses all material terms;
  • a consumer provides express informed consent before the consumer is charged for a product or the agreement is automatically renewed; and
  • the agreement provides the consumer with a way to cancel the agreement, in the same manner by which the agreement was entered, before incurring further or increased charges.

Further, under free-to-pay conversion contracts (a type of negative option agreement where a consumer is charged a nominal introductory rate and an increased rate after the introductory period ends), before charging a consumer the provider of the good or service must obtain the consumer's informed consent, provide the terms of the contract, and provide information about how to cancel the contract.

The bill also requires that certain notifications are provided to consumers in the context of other forms of negative option agreements online, such as notice between two and seven days before an automatic renewal.

The bill provides for enforcement of these requirements by the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general.

Alternative Names
Official Title as IntroducedA bill to increase consumer protection with respect to negative option offers in all media, including on the internet, and for other purposes.

Policy Areas
Commerce

Potential Impact
Bank accounts, deposits, capital
Civil actions and liability
Consumer affairs
Consumer credit
Contracts and agency
Internet, web applications, social media
State and local government operations

Comments

Recent Activity

Latest Summary1/21/2022

Unsubscribe Act of 2021

This bill requires that certain consumer protections are included in negative option agreements (an agreement under which a consumer's failure to take an affirmative action is considered ap...


Latest Action6/16/2021
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.