When and how to escalate to your state Attorney General. What they can do, expected timeline, and how to maximize impact. This guide is customized for New York residents with New York-specific consumer protection information.
New York Local Tip: NYC has its own Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP) — file complaints at nyc.gov/consumers.
New York law: Deceptive Acts and Practices Law (N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 349) — treble damages available — private right of action
Visit naag.org/find-my-ag to find your state's Attorney General website. Most have dedicated consumer protection divisions with online complaint forms.
AG offices want to see that you tried to resolve directly. Include copies of your demand letter, the company's response (or lack thereof), and any relevant communication.
Most states have online forms. Include: company name, your contact info, description of the issue, amount in dispute, what resolution you want.
Upload: your demand letter, billing statements, correspondence, cancellation confirmations, screenshots of deceptive practices.
AG offices handle thousands of complaints. If you haven't heard back in 30 days, call to check status. Some states have online tracking.