Walmart agrees to $100M settlement over deceptive pay practices in Spark Driver program
TL;DR
Walmart will pay $100 million to settle an FTC lawsuit alleging deceptive pay practices in its Spark Driver program. The company misled drivers about earnings and tips, and must now implement verification and stop adjusting pay after offers.
Key Takeaways
- •Walmart settled for $100 million over deceptive pay practices in its Spark Driver gig worker program.
- •The company misled drivers about base pay and tips, and told customers 100% of tips went to drivers when they did not.
- •Practices included splitting tips between drivers without disclosure and removing tips from batch orders.
- •The settlement requires Walmart to implement an earnings verification program and prohibits adjusting pay after initial offers.
- •Walmart is banned from misrepresenting earnings in future driver offers.
Walmart has agreed to pay $100 million to settle a lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) over deceptive pay practices within its Spark Driver service, which uses gig workers to deliver online orders from local stores to customers. The retailer was accused of misleading drivers about their potential base pay and tip amounts, and then deceived customers by saying that 100% of tips went to the drivers, when they did not.
In its original complaint, the FTC was joined by Arizona, California, Colorado, Illinois, Michigan, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Utah, and Wisconsin. The lawsuit alleged that Walmart, since 2021, had made false representations about Spark Driver earnings.
Among these, Walmart was accused of frequently splitting a customer’s order between drivers, which would lead to splitting the tip. Meanwhile, customers were told their driver — as in one single driver — would get the full tip. In batch orders, Walmart would remove tips from some of the orders without informing the driver. Walmart also promised tips to drivers in advance of taking orders, but then failed to collect a tip from the customer, leaving the driver without a tip entirely.
Other issues had to do with reductions Walmart made to drivers’ base pay after they had accepted an offer or other misrepresented incentives that could have provided drivers with extra cash.
Walmart also told customers that drivers would get 100% of their tips, but that wasn’t always true.
The lawsuit alleged that these practices caused drivers to lose millions of dollars they were promised and generated thousands of consumer complaints.
As a result of the settlement, Walmart will have to implement an earnings verification program to ensure drivers are paid the promised earnings and tips. It’s also prohibited from adjusting the base pay, incentives, or tips after the initial offer, except if the driver fails to provide the service or a customer cancels. Walmart has been banned from misrepresenting earnings in future driver offers as well.
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“Labor markets cannot function efficiently without truthful and non-misleading information about earnings and other material terms,” said Christopher Mufarrige, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, in a statement about the settlement agreement. “Today’s settlement reflects the Trump-Vance FTC’s focus on ensuring a healthy labor market for American workers, which is critical to the nation’s success.”