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    States/District of Columbia/Amazon Prime
    DC + E-Commerce
    Cancellation: medium

    How to Dispute Amazon Prime Charges in District of Columbia

    District of Columbia residents can cite the Consumer Protection Procedures Act (D.C. Code § 28-3901) alongside federal FTC Click-to-Cancel when disputing Amazon Prime. Average dispute: $15-200.

    Private Right of Action

    Yes in District of Columbia

    Treble Damages

    Yes in District of Columbia

    Auto-Renewal Law

    Yes in District of Columbia

    Medical Billing Protection

    Yes in District of Columbia

    Common Amazon Prime Billing Issues

    Auto-renewed without notice
    Price increase
    Prime Video add-on channels
    Kindle Unlimited forgot to cancel
    Audible membership

    District of Columbia Legal Strategy vs. Amazon Prime

    State Law: Consumer Protection Procedures Act

    D.C. Code § 28-3901 prohibits unfair and deceptive practices in District of Columbia. Allows up to 3x damages. You can sue directly.DisputeAI cites this statute automatically in your demand letter.

    Federal Laws for Amazon Prime

    • - FTC Click-to-Cancel
    • - ROSCA
    • - FCBA

    Tips for District of Columbia Residents

    • Amazon has generous refund policy — just ask
    • Prime renewal must be disclosed 30 days prior
    • Cite ROSCA for online auto-renewals
    • File a complaint with the District of Columbia Office of the Attorney General if Amazon Prime doesn't respond
    All District of Columbia dispute lawsAll Amazon Prime disputes
    Dispute Amazon Prime in District of Columbia Now

    AI demand letter citing D.C. Code § 28-3901 + FTC Click-to-Cancel from $4.99