Advertisement said free, then set up charge for $15 a month on recurring payment. Company didn't return any correspondence ...called Pay Pal and got credit. This is the worst of online scammers. They get away with it enough to make it worthwhile.
Ad, home page all say free forms to fill and print. Only After you fill in your personal info on the forms do they ask for payment info and you must sign up for subscription or a 7 day trial--with payment info.
Misleading, need disclosure on home page, deceptive.
Usually I'm savvy about detecting BS "small print deception",but I missed it somehow and have been charged a recurring $15 a month for a few months.I just caught it and cancelled this through Pay Pal,then forwarded the cancellation info directly to them...F**ckers!.....
Eforms.org needs tp improve their advertisements and website by an up-front, clear disclosure of the strings attached to obtaining a "free" document.
Eforms.org advertises “eForms - Free Fillable Forms - Create Documents for Download; Ad www.eforms.org/; Create and Download Free Legal Forms for Personal or Business use." using advertisements on Google. (as of 11/11/2016)
In reality, in order to see or download the "free" document you've created, you have to agree to one of their pricing plans: (1) Trial plan: Free for 7 days and $15/month thereafter, which can be canceled at any time (in theory at least). (2) $45 purchase of a single document. (3) $120/year unlimited documents.
Vendors should disclose any conditions (in this case, costs) to obtaining "free" stuff upfront before customers spend time and effort creating a document as well as revealing personal and confidential information to the forms vendor.
While I've seen other complaints by their customers about difficulty in canceling their free trial subscriptions, my complaint is simply about the lack of an upfront disclosure of the requirement to sign-up for their trial subscription. (Since I did not sign-up for the trial subscription because of credit card security concerns, I cannot comment on how easy or difficult it is to cancel their trial plan.)
Electronic Forms, LLC. Reviews
rip Off Scam
Advertisement said free, then set up charge for $15 a month on recurring payment. Company didn't return any correspondence ...called Pay Pal and got credit. This is the worst of online scammers. They get away with it enough to make it worthwhile.
Ad, home page all say free forms to fill and print. Only After you fill in your personal info on the forms do they ask for payment info and you must sign up for subscription or a 7 day trial--with payment info.
Misleading, need disclosure on home page, deceptive.
Ripped off
Shut this dangerous rip off down immediately....scam scam scam
Thiefs
They are thief’s
SCAM....deceptive advertising
Usually I'm savvy about detecting BS "small print deception",but I missed it somehow and have been charged a recurring $15 a month for a few months.I just caught it and cancelled this through Pay Pal,then forwarded the cancellation info directly to them...F**ckers!.....
I tried to get one of paper on this website and it gave me 7 days trial but there is no way I can cancel trial.
I finally get charged 15 bucks for nothing and I contacted customer service. It is such a pain in my a*s to communicate
with one of representative. I would like to get all the refund however they kept saying they would give me only half.
Eforms.org needs tp improve their advertisements and website by an up-front, clear disclosure of the strings attached to obtaining a "free" document.
Eforms.org advertises “eForms - Free Fillable Forms - Create Documents for Download; Ad www.eforms.org/; Create and Download Free Legal Forms for Personal or Business use." using advertisements on Google. (as of 11/11/2016)
In reality, in order to see or download the "free" document you've created, you have to agree to one of their pricing plans: (1) Trial plan: Free for 7 days and $15/month thereafter, which can be canceled at any time (in theory at least). (2) $45 purchase of a single document. (3) $120/year unlimited documents.
Vendors should disclose any conditions (in this case, costs) to obtaining "free" stuff upfront before customers spend time and effort creating a document as well as revealing personal and confidential information to the forms vendor.
While I've seen other complaints by their customers about difficulty in canceling their free trial subscriptions, my complaint is simply about the lack of an upfront disclosure of the requirement to sign-up for their trial subscription. (Since I did not sign-up for the trial subscription because of credit card security concerns, I cannot comment on how easy or difficult it is to cancel their trial plan.)