Adobe Showed 215-Day Trial, Then Charged Me Early and Locked Me into a Contract — Is This Fair?
- May 20, 2025
- 1 Antwort
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Hey everyone,
I’ve been dealing with a frustrating situation with Adobe and wanted to get some advice or thoughts from others who may have gone through something similar.
A while after I signed up for Adobe Creative Cloud, I checked my subscription page and was surprised to see it said I had 215 days of free trial remaining. It even stated that I wouldn’t be charged until several months later. I also received an official email from Adobe confirming this — so naturally, I felt safe planning my learning around that timeline.
But then, out of nowhere, I got charged — well before the trial was supposed to end.
I reached out to Adobe support and was eventually escalated to a supervisor. After showing screenshots and the email, they admitted it was a technical glitch — that the 215-day trial was never meant to be there.
They offered me two options:
Cancel and get a refund, but I’d lose access to the apps immediately (which was a problem because I had just started an Adobe-based course),
Or, get 4 months of free access, but be locked into a 12-month contract afterwards — with a pretty steep cancellation fee if I wanted to leave early.
Feeling stuck, I chose the 4-month extension because I had already enrolled in a course that required Adobe tools, and losing access immediately would have disrupted my learning. At the time, it felt like the only practical option — but in hindsight, I now realize I was put in a position where I had no real choice. I never knowingly agreed to a 12-month contract, and that acceptance was based entirely on Adobe’s system showing false information.
Has anyone else faced this kind of situation?
Can companies enforce contracts based on incorrect trial info?
Should a “glitch” excuse override what the system showed and what the customer was told?
Am I being unreasonable, or is this worth escalating?
