The universal playbook for canceling any subscription service — streaming, SaaS, fitness, or otherwise — with legal protections cited. This guide applies specifically to Uber One / Uber Eats Pass ($9.99/mo) subscribers in Buffalo, New York. New York's Auto-Renewal Law protects you.
New York's Auto-Renewal Law (N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 527) gives Buffalo residents specific protections when dealing with Uber One / Uber Eats Pass:
Penalties: Violations subject to AG enforcement and consumer private action
Applied to Uber One / Uber Eats Pass (Uber app) for Buffalo residents
Find your billing method
Check whether you subscribed directly (company website), through Apple, Google, or your bank. The billing source determines WHERE you cancel — not the company's app.
Locate the cancellation path
Log into your account → Settings → Billing or Subscription. Under the FTC Click-to-Cancel Rule, cancellation must be as easy as signup.
Document your cancellation
Screenshot the cancellation confirmation screen. Note the date, time, and any confirmation number. This is your legal protection if they keep charging you.
Watch your next billing statement
Check your statement after the next billing date. If you see a charge after cancellation, you have grounds for a chargeback citing the date you canceled.
Block the merchant if needed
If the company charges you again, call your card issuer and request a merchant block. This prevents future charges even without the company's cooperation.
Method: Uber app · Difficulty: easy
Uber One / Uber Eats Pass-specific tips
No prorated refunds.
Under N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 527, Buffalo residents may be entitled to a full refund if Uber One / Uber Eats Pass didn't properly disclose auto-renewal terms.
SubScrub auto-cites N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 527 for Buffalo residents