
Angela Lang/CNET
District of Columbia Attorney General Karl Racine filed a lawsuit against the grocery delivery service Instacart on Thursday. The suit alleges that the company deceived customers with service fees that appeared to go to workers, but went into company coffers instead.
“Instacart tricked District consumers into believing they were tipping grocery delivery workers when, in fact, the company was charging them extra fees and pocketing the money,” said Racine, adding that the company also failed to play DC sales taxes. “We filed suit to force Instacart to honor its legal obligations, pay DC the taxes it owes, and return millions of dollars to District consumers the company deceived.”
The lawsuit, which mirrors a similar suit against DoorDash that Racine filed in 2019, says that from September 2016 through April 2018, Instacart charged DC customers a default “service fee” of 10% for its delivery services.
“To a reasonable consumer, this service fee appeared to be a tip: the amount was set as a percentage of the order total, consumers could increase or decrease the percentage or waive the amount, and there was no tip option visible at check-out,” reads a press release announcing the suit. “However, unlike a tip, the service fee went to Instacart and not to workers. Instacart used the revenue to cover its operating expenses.”
The suit notes that Instacart updated its service fee policies in April 2018 after facing scrutiny in the media, but says the company refused to reimburse customers. The suit also alleges that Instacart has failed to collect DC sales tax on revenue and delivery fees for as long as it’s been operational in the area.
Instacart didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
In 2019, Instacart’s workers, which the company calls “Shoppers,” planned a protest calling on Instacart to make the default tip amount at least 10%, let the Shopper keep the whole tip, and eliminate the service fee the company reportedly keeps.
“We did not arrive at the 10% figure arbitrarily,” wrote Instacart Shopper Vanessa Bain in a letter to customers explaining the 2019 protest. “Rather, this is what the default tip amount was back when I and many others started working for Instacart. We are simply demanding the restoration of what was originally promised.”
More Stories
Virtual Assistant Work Advantages
Free Music With Online Radio Stations
History: Computers Components and Technology