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States/New Jersey/Wall Street Journal
Back to New Jersey subscription laws
NJhard to cancelNews · $4-$39.99/mo

Cancel Wall Street Journal in New Jersey

Step-by-step guide to cancel your Wall Street Journal subscription, backed by New Jersey's Automatic Renewal Act and the FTC Click-to-Cancel Rule.

Your Rights in New Jersey

New Jersey's Automatic Renewal Act (N.J. Stat. § 56:12-16) gives you specific protections when canceling Wall Street Journal:

  • Written notice 30 days before renewal
  • Clear disclosure of terms
  • Easy cancellation method
  • Right to cancel within 30 days

Penalties for Wall Street Journal: Consumer fraud violation — treble damages plus attorney fees

How to Cancel Wall Street Journal

Method: Phone only

  1. 1Call 1-800-568-7625
  2. 2Navigate to cancellation department
  3. 3Confirm you want to cancel (retention offers incoming)
  4. 4Get confirmation number

Tips for Canceling Wall Street Journal in New Jersey

  • Introductory rate jumps to full price ($39.99/mo)
  • Cannot cancel online
  • Library access may give you free WSJ
  • Student rates available with .edu email

In New Jersey: If Wall Street Journal makes cancellation harder than signup, they may be violating N.J. Stat. § 56:12-16. Document everything and consider filing a complaint with the New Jersey Attorney General.

Refund Policy

No refund for current period.

Under N.J. Stat. § 56:12-16, you may be entitled to a full refund if Wall Street Journal didn't properly disclose auto-renewal terms at signup.

Watch Out For

  • · Auto-renewal at full price after introductory offer

Federal Laws Protecting You

These federal laws apply to Wall Street Journal in every state, including New Jersey:

  • FTC Click-to-Cancel Rule (16 CFR Part 425) — cancellation must be as easy as signup
  • ROSCA (15 USC § 8403) — requires clear disclosure and affirmative consent for online subscriptions
  • Fair Credit Billing Act (15 USC § 1666) — dispute unauthorized charges on credit cards
  • EFTA (15 USC § 1693) — protections against unauthorized debit charges

Legal Strategy for Wall Street Journal in New Jersey

Wall Street Journal is rated hard to cancel. But in New Jersey, you have strong legal leverage:

  1. 1. Follow the cancellation steps above and document everything (screenshots, dates, names).
  2. 2. If Wall Street Journal refuses or delays, cite N.J. Stat. § 56:12-16 (Automatic Renewal Act) in a written demand.
  3. 3. File a complaint with the New Jersey Attorney General's office.
  4. 4. Dispute charges with your credit card company under the Fair Credit Billing Act.

SubScrub generates demand letters that cite both N.J. Stat. § 56:12-16 and the FTC Click-to-Cancel Rule automatically.

All New Jersey subscription lawsCancel Wall Street Journal (all states)
Cancel Wall Street Journal Now

SubScrub auto-cites N.J. Stat. § 56:12-16 + sends legally-backed cancellation demands