- 23andMe users say the company charged them for subscription renewals they had cancelled.
- The FTC released over a hundred customer complaints to Gizmodo.
- Users alleged that 23andMe turned auto-renewal back on without their knowledge, and charged them more.
If you think you’ve been charged for a 23andMe subscription renewal even though you know you cancelled it, you’re in good company.
Fed-up users of the genetic testing service have alleged the company scammed them, turning their auto renewal back on even after they had turned it off, and charging them more than they had originally signed up for, according to a new report from Gizmodo.
The Federal Trade Commission released over a hundred complaints that 23andMe users had submitted since the beginning of 2023, after Gizmodo submitted a FOIA request for the documents.
In many of those complaints, some of which Gizmodo published, users detailed renewal practices that they considered dubious and unethical.
“I turned off auto-renew after the last unwanted renewal,” one user wrote in their complaint to the FTC, according to Gizmodo. “However, I was STILL charged for a renewal. I did not authorize this. I turned off the auto-renewal, which this company does not make easy to do and does not send a confirmation about. I did not receive any emails telling me that I was going to be charged again. Why would I? I turned it off 11 months earlier.”
A spokesperson for 23andMe told Gizmodo that the company does send a notification to customers 30 days before their subscription is set to renew.
Another user accused the company of secretly turning auto-renewal back on after they had turned it off several times.
Users also complained that even when they told 23andMe they were still charged after they had turned off auto-renew, the company refused to give a refund.
“I cancelled my subscription with 23andMe in January 2022 and asked to be removed from auto billing. Nevertheless, they charged me an annual fee on January 15, 2023. The customer service will not refund despite their practices being predatory,” a user wrote to the FTC, according to Gizmodo.
23andMe told Gizmodo that it does not offer refunds for “partially used membership periods.”
Others said that when 23andMe renewed their subscription without their knowledge, it charged them more money than the original membership they had signed up for. One user said they were charged 10 times the amount of their original subscription, while others said they were charged three times the amount.
People have also taken to Reddit to report their issues with 23andMe, with one Redditer writing, “I couldn’t believe it. I thought I was hacked.”
23andMe did not immediately respond to Business Insider’s request for comment, but in statements provided to Gizmodo, the company appeared to stand by its renewal practices.