For many Australians, signing up to a meal box service was framed as the epitome of modern convenience: quick prompts, fresh ingredients delivered to the door and dinner resolved. Yet in the digital economy, ease of entry carries an obligation of equal clarity in the fine print. On 16 December 2025 the ACCC took the unusual step of launching separate Federal Court proceedings against two high-profile meal services, HelloFresh and Youfoodz. The ACCC alleges both misled consumers about how their s
heir subscription systems works, creating what consumer advocates call “subscription traps”.
The ACCC is elaborately taking a seemingly niche consumer grievance and spotlighting how design choices in subscription commerce can blur the line between offer and obligation, leaving tens of thousands of Australians paying for services they never intended to receive
Subscription promises and hidden turns
The focal point of the ACCC’s case is a contrast between what was communicated and what consumers actually experienced. Both companies advertised across websites and mobile apps that customers could easily cancel their meal subscriptions through online account settings, with a caveat being as long as they did so before the specified cut-off time.
For many consumers, this was not true in practice. According to the ACCC, online cancellation did not stop the first delivery or charge; only speaking to a customer service representative did.
More so, tens of thousands were charged despite cancelling before the cut-off time and HelloFresh, in particular, reportedly required users to provide payment details to view meal options even though it represented they “would not be charged unless they selected meals from the menu.”
ACCC Commissioner Luke Woodward called the conduct “a suite of confusing and unclear subscription practices in breach of Australia’s consumer laws.”
According to the ACCC’s Federal Court filings, more than 100,000 Australians were charged after taking steps they believed would cancel their subscriptions. Between January 2023 and March 2025, the regulator alleges 62,061 HelloFresh customers were billed despite cancelling before first-delivery cut-off times, while between October 2022 and November 2024, 39,408 Youfoodz customers faced similar charges.
A surge in complaints late last year prompted the ACCC to investigate, culminating in separate Federal Court proceedings launched on 16 December 2025, with the regulator seeking penalties, compensation orders and compliance measures against both companies.
A subscription economy under watch
The rise of subscription commerce from meal kits and pre-prepared meals to digital services has restructured how many Australians consume goods and services. But regulators and consumer advocates are increasingly concerned that ease of signup often outpaces the clarity of the contract, especially when cancellation is considered.
This commerce isn’t just confined to Australia. Similar debates about “dark patterns” or design elements that nudge users toward choices they don’t really understand have played out globally. In New Zealand, HelloFresh was fined more than $700,000 this year over misleading conduct related to subscription activities.
However, within Australia, the issue has drawn political and regulatory attention beyond this case. Government voices have showcased a broader crackdown on unfair trading practices with consultation and possible legislation expected in 2026.
The latest filings detail examples that resonate beyond statistics. One individual allegedly entered payment details to browse HelloFresh’s menu, then decided not to proceed, only to later discover they were charged and found it difficult to reach support. Another Youfoodz customer allegedly cancelled minutes after signing up, yet received a delivery and bill.
These anecdotes stress a core regulatory question on interface design and when it becomes misleading conduct.
Retailers be aware
This case holds practical lessons for retail leaders. Transparency, for one, is not optional, representations about cancellation and billing should reflect how systems actually work.
UX is law in digital commerce; design choices are evidently now part of legal compliance, not just customer convenience.
And consumer trust is incredibly fragile. Perceived tricks of traps can erode brand value rapidly in an age of instant online reviews and social media scrutiny.
The outcome of these proceedings remains in the hands of the Federal Court. But the ACCC’s action itself and the scale of alleged harm raises clearly that marketing convenience must be matched by contractual clarity.
Regulators won’t stand by. As Woodward put it succinctly, “businesses using confusing and complicated subscription cancellation policies are a matter of significant public concern.”
That is a message both online and offline retailers would do well to heed.