FREE TOOL · 11 JURISDICTIONS · CITED STATUTES

Where might your subscription flow miss a US auto-renewal law?

Check how your signup and cancellation flows line up with each state's auto-renewal rules. See the exact statute behind every flag. No account, no data leaves your browser.

No signup. Your answers stay in your browser.
11
jurisdictions
73
cited requirements
0
data sent to a server
MIT
open dataset
HOW IT WORKS

Three steps, about two minutes, nothing to upload.

01

Describe your flow

A short questionnaire about how you sign customers up and how they cancel. No documents, no terms-of-service upload.

02

We map it to each state's rules

A deterministic engine matches your answers against an open, cited dataset of each state's auto-renewal requirements. No AI decides anything.

03

See gaps and the statute behind each

A plain-English, state-by-state list of where your flow may not address a requirement, each linked to the statute itself.

CONTEXT

Why this patchwork is worth understanding.

Background, not a warning. The point is clarity, not pressure.

$2,500

Per-violation penalties appear in several state auto-renewal statutes, and recent enforcement has reached large settlements.

No federal floor

The FTC's federal click-to-cancel rule was vacated in 2025, so states are setting the rules and they do not all agree.

30+ states

Distinct auto-renewal and negative-option laws now exist across more than thirty states, each with its own specifics.

Questions, answered plainly

Do you store my data?

No. The scan runs entirely in your browser. Your answers are not sent to a server and nothing is saved on our end.

Do I need an account?

No. There is no signup and no email wall. You can run the scan and read your results without giving us anything.

Is this legal advice?

No. This is an educational tool. It compares the flow you describe against published statutes and cites each one, so you can have an informed conversation with a qualified attorney. It does not tell you whether you are compliant.

How current is the data?

The dataset is research-grade and last reviewed in June 2026. Every requirement is cited to its statute, and the data is open under an MIT license so you can check it yourself.

This is an educational tool, not legal advice. It compares the flow you describe against published statutes to surface areas worth a closer look. For decisions, talk to a lawyer.

Start with the free scan. See where to look.

Map your signup and cancellation flows against 11 jurisdictions in about two minutes. If you find gaps you want fixed, Penguin Alley can implement the technical changes you or your attorney specify.

Run the free scan →How Penguin Alley can help