Avanquest Software Trapped California Consumers in Hidden Auto-Renewal Subscriptions for Years
A $2.5 million settlement exposes how a software company quietly billed consumers for renewing subscriptions without ever making the terms visible or clear.
Avanquest Software SAS, UC Distribution LLC, and their Canadian affiliate 7270356 Canada Inc. enrolled California consumers into automatically renewing software subscriptions without clearly disclosing the recurring charge terms. Products like inPixio, SodaPDF, PDF Architect, Adaware, and PC HelpSoft quietly billed users year after year. Thousands of Californians were charged for subscriptions they did not knowingly agree to renew, in direct violation of California’s Automatic Renewal Law. The company agreed to a $2.5 million settlement rather than face a full trial, but denied any wrongdoing.
If you were billed by any Avanquest product between 2019 and 2025, you may be owed money. Demand transparency from every software company you use, and push your representatives to strengthen auto-renewal enforcement.
⚠ The Allegations: A Breakdown
| 01 | Avanquest Software SAS, UC Distribution LLC, and 7270356 Canada Inc. enrolled California consumers in automatically renewing software subscriptions without first presenting the automatic renewal offer terms in a clear and conspicuous manner. | high |
| 02 | Affected products include 17 widely-used titles: inPixio, SodaPDF, PDF Architect, PDFCreator, PDFSuite, ExpertPDF, PC HelpSoft Driver Updater, PC HelpSoft PC Cleaner, PC HelpSoft Mac Cleaner, Driver Updater, Adaware Privacy, Adaware Adblock, Adaware PC Cleaner, Adaware Driver Manager, OneSafe PC Cleaner, OneSafe Mac Cleaner, and OneSafe Driver Manager. | high |
| 03 | Consumers were charged for subscription renewals between November 16, 2019 and August 31, 2025, without receiving refunds for charges they did not authorize in any meaningful sense. | high |
| 04 | The conduct violated the California Automatic Renewal Law (Bus. & Prof. Code sec. 17600 et seq.) and the Unfair Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code sec. 17200 et seq.), two of the strongest consumer protection statutes in the country. | high |
| 05 | The class was first sued on November 16, 2023 in Los Angeles (Fernandez case), then again on May 13, 2025 in San Diego (de Rochemont and Guy case), reflecting ongoing, unresolved harm across multiple years and jurisdictions. | medium |
| 01 | California’s Automatic Renewal Law has been on the books since 2010. Avanquest was enrolling consumers in subscriptions as early as December 1, 2010 under the class definition, meaning the company had 15 years of notice about legal requirements and still allegedly failed to comply. | high |
| 02 | The settlement agreement explicitly states that defendants deny all wrongdoing, and the injunctive relief clause includes language noting that compliance changes “shall not constitute an admission” that prior practices violated the law. This kind of language shields companies from accountability even as they pay out millions. | high |
| 03 | Despite the settlement, no individual executives from Avanquest, UC Distribution, or 7270356 Canada Inc. face personal liability. The company pays; the people who made the decisions keep their jobs and salaries. | high |
| 04 | The injunctive relief in the settlement only requires defendants to make changes “to the extent applicable,” a hedge that leaves open the possibility that the company may argue some disclosures were already compliant. | medium |
| 01 | The settlement allows defendants to pay $2.5 million while simultaneously denying all liability, wrongdoing, and fault. Consumers get a fraction of what was taken from them; the company walks away without a legal finding of wrongdoing. | high |
| 02 | Up to 38% of the $2.5 million settlement, roughly $950,000, may go to Class Counsel in attorneys fees, plus up to $200,000 in litigation expenses. After deducting fees, costs, and administration expenses, the amount reaching harmed consumers will be substantially less than $1.5 million. | high |
| 03 | Class members who miss the payment election window forfeit their share entirely. Any unclaimed money flows to a cy pres recipient approved by the court, not back to the consumers who were overcharged. | medium |
| 04 | The settlement structure required plaintiffs to file in two separate cases across two California counties before consolidating, suggesting the company’s multi-entity structure (a US LLC, a Canadian holding company, and a French SAS parent) complicated and prolonged the path to accountability. | medium |
| 05 | The full-day mediation in July 2025 failed to produce a settlement on the day itself. Only months of continued negotiations produced a deal, demonstrating that corporate defendants can use procedural delay to extend the duration consumers must wait for any relief. | medium |
| 01 | Consumers were charged recurring fees for software subscriptions they believed were one-time purchases, a common and predatory pattern in the software industry that drains money from household budgets without warning. | high |
| 02 | The class period spans nearly six years (November 2019 to August 2025), meaning many consumers were charged multiple times over multiple renewal cycles before any legal action caught up with the company. | high |
| 03 | Each participating class member receives only a pro-rata share of the net settlement, meaning individual payouts shrink as more consumers claim their share. The company, however, paid a fixed cap; it bears no additional cost no matter how many people were harmed. | medium |
| 04 | Products like PC HelpSoft PC Cleaner and Adaware are typically marketed to less tech-savvy consumers, including older adults, who are least likely to notice a recurring subscription charge buried in their bank statements and most likely to feel the financial impact. | medium |
| 01 | Three separate corporate entities are named as defendants: UC Distribution LLC (the US distributor), 7270356 Canada Inc. (the Canadian holding company operating as Avanquest Canada), and Avanquest Software SAS (the French parent SAS). This web of entities across three countries created multiple legal hurdles for plaintiffs seeking accountability. | high |
| 02 | Avanquest Software SAS was originally sued under a different name (Avanquest North America LLC) in the first case, requiring amendments as plaintiffs uncovered the actual corporate structure behind the consumer-facing brands. Opaque corporate naming made accountability harder to achieve. | high |
| 03 | The same individual (Eric Gareau, CEO) signed for both 7270356 Canada Inc. and Avanquest Software SAS, revealing that despite distinct legal entities, control of the operation was centralized in a single executive who remained insulated from personal liability throughout the litigation. | medium |
🕐 Timeline of Events
💬 Direct Quotes from the Settlement Record
“The Lawsuit alleges that UC Distribution LLC, 7270356 Canada Inc., and Avanquest Software SAS charged certain California consumers for automatically renewing subscriptions for Avanquest Software products without first presenting the automatic renewal offer terms in a clear and conspicuous manner.”
💡 This is the core harm: consumers were billed for renewals they were never meaningfully informed about. Burying subscription terms is a deliberate design choice, not an oversight.
“This Agreement represents a compromise of disputed claims. Defendants deny any and all allegations of liability, fault, or wrongdoing.”
💡 Corporations routinely pay millions to settle cases while denying all wrongdoing. This structure lets them avoid the public record of a court finding against them, even as consumers bear the real consequences of their conduct.
“All California residents who, (1) on or after December 1, 2010, were enrolled in an automatic renewal or continuous service subscription for an Avanquest Software product… and (2) were charged for such subscription between November 16, 2019 and August 31, 2025.”
💡 The enrollment window stretches back to 2010, meaning consumers could have been signed up for 15 years before this settlement provided any recourse. Many were charged year after year with no avenue for relief until this lawsuit.
“Class Counsel will file a motion for an award of attorneys fees of up to thirty-eight percent (38%) percent of the Settlement Amount, plus actual litigation expenses not to exceed $200,000.”
💡 Up to $950,000 of the $2.5 million could go to attorneys fees before a single harmed consumer receives a dollar. This is not a critique of class action lawyers, who take enormous risks; it is a reality of a system where corporations can offload accountability onto a settlement structure designed to minimize their exposure.
“To the extent applicable, Defendants will make any changes to their subscription offer materials and website disclosures to comply with the ARL. Nothing in this Paragraph shall constitute an admission or concession that any of Defendants’ offer materials, processes, business practices, disclosures, or procedures heretofore have not been in compliance with the ARL.”
💡 The company agrees to follow the law while explicitly reserving the right to claim it already was following the law. This is not accountability; it is a legal shield dressed up as reform.
“Any Participating Class Member who does not submit an election for a settlement payment method by the date that is sixty (60) days after the Effective Date will forfeit the right to receive a settlement payment.”
💡 Consumers who were deceived into subscriptions now face a tight deadline to claim their own money back. Those who miss it, including people who never received notice, lose their share permanently.
💬 Commentary
Source: de Rochemont, et al. v. UC Distribution LLC, et al., San Diego County Superior Court, Case No. 25CU024563C. Settlement Agreement dated November–December 2025. EvilCorporations.com is an independent corporate accountability publication.
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