
FTC Settles DoNotPay Case: AI 'Robot Lawyer' Lacked Testing
# FTC Enforcement Action Against DoNotPay's Deceptive AI Marketing
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) finalized a consent order against DoNotPay, Inc. in February 2025, resolving an enforcement action over the company's deceptive marketing of an AI chatbot as a fully functional legal tool. The settlement marks a significant federal regulatory action targeting an autonomous AI agent's false capability claims in the legal services market.
What DoNotPay Claimed—and Didn't Verify
DoNotPay marketed its product as capable of producing "perfectly valid legal documents" and as a "robot lawyer"—claims the company did not substantiate. The FTC's investigation found that DoNotPay did not test whether the AI-generated legal documents were actually valid and did not retain licensed attorneys to verify the accuracy of its automated legal outputs. This gap between marketed capability and actual testing became the core of the FTC's deceptive practice complaint.
The autonomous system was presented to consumers as capable of handling legal work without human oversight, when in reality no qualified legal professional had reviewed its outputs for correctness or compliance with legal standards.
Settlement Terms and Consumer Notification
The FTC Commission voted 5-0 in favor of the settlement, requiring DoNotPay to:
• Pay **$193,000 in monetary relief** to affected consumers
• **Notify all subscribers from 2021–2023** about the limitations of its AI legal features
• Obtain **competent evidence** before making future claims about AI-generated legal document validity
• Refrain from representing its product as a substitute for licensed legal counsel without clear disclaimers


