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HomeBusinessConsumers File Proposed Class Action Seeking Reimbursement of Pre-Supreme Court Tariff Costs

Consumers File Proposed Class Action Seeking Reimbursement of Pre-Supreme Court Tariff Costs

Consumers File Proposed Class Action Seeking Reimbursement of Pre-Supreme Court Tariff Costs

Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O),  was sued on Friday by consumers seeking refunds for costs passed on to them in the form of higher prices as a result ​of tariffs the U.S. Supreme Court later concluded had been unlawfully imposed by President ‌Donald Trump.

 

Consumers in a proposed class action, opens new tab filed in federal court in Seattle alleged that the e-commerce giant collected hundreds of millions of dollars in unlawful tariff costs by raising prices on imported goods ​before the Supreme Court had ruled.

 

The U.S. Supreme Court in February concluded in a ​6-3 decision that Trump overstepped his authority by using the International Emergency ⁠Economic Powers Act to impose his sweeping tariffs.

 

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Thousands of companies have begun to ​seek billions of dollars in refunds from the government following the ruling.
But Amazon has not, ​which the lawsuit alleged was “not because it lacks a legal basis to do so, but because it seeks to curry favor with Trump by allowing the federal government to retain the funds.”

 

“The problem is ​that the funds Amazon is using to stay in the President’s good graces do ​not belong to Amazon,” the lawsuit says. “These funds were wrongfully taken from consumers to cover IEEPA Tariffs ‌that ⁠have since been invalidated.”

 

The lawsuit asserts claims of unjust enrichment and violation of Washington state’s consumer-protection law.
Amazon did not respond to a request for comment.

 

The lawsuit follows several earlier cases filed by consumers accusing companies ranging from Costco to Nike to FedEx of failing to pass ​on tariff refunds to ​consumers.

 

Unlike companies that imported ⁠goods, consumers are not eligible to seek tariff refunds from the government for the higher costs they incurred while they were ​in effect, Friday’s lawsuit notes.

 

To support its claim that politics were ​behind Amazon’s ⁠actions, the lawsuit notes that in April 2025, the company faced White House blowback after a report that it was considering displaying how much of a product’s cost came from the IEEPA ⁠tariffs.

 

Amazon ​denied the story and said it never considered listing ​tariff prices on its main retail site. But the report prompted Trump to call Amazon Executive Chairman Jeff ​Bezos to complain, the lawsuit says.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Tom Hogue

This article was first reported by Reuters