SeaWorld Gave You Twelve Minutes to Catch the Junk Fee It Had Been Hiding All Along
The Non-Financial Ledger: What It Actually Felt Like to Buy a Ticket
Imagine you are a parent in San Diego. You decide to take your kid to SeaWorld. You go to the website, find the tickets, see a price you can work with, and put two of them in your cart. The whole time you are clicking through, picking your tickets, deciding how many you want, the price on your screen stays the same. It feels fair. It feels honest. You have done this kind of thing before at a hundred other websites. You know how it works.
Then you hit “Checkout.”
Suddenly there is a new number on the screen: $10.99 in “Taxes & Fees.” You did not see it before. The word “taxes” is right there, so your brain connects it to the government. That is exactly what SeaWorld wanted you to think. The complaint is explicit: SeaWorld used that phrasing to “falsely pin the responsibility for these junk fees on the government.” But there were no taxes. There were never any taxes. The whole $10.99 was a SeaWorld service fee, dressed up in official-sounding language so you would not push back against it.
And here is the part that makes it worse: before you have time to process the new number, a clock appears. Twelve minutes. Tick. Tick. Tick. You now have twelve minutes to decide whether to finish the purchase or walk away and lose the tickets you just spent time selecting. You cannot easily look up whether Birch Aquarium has better prices. You cannot check Sea Life Aquarium. You are under artificial pressure, inside a countdown that SeaWorld created specifically to limit your ability to think and compare. This is not an accident of web design. The complaint argues it was a deliberate tactic to manipulate consumers after they had already invested time in the purchase process.
Claire Petrun, the named plaintiff, went through exactly this on October 7, 2023. She bought two tickets on seaworld.com/san-diego/. She paid the fee. She did not know she had legal options. Most people do not. That is the whole point of a junk fee buried at the last second behind a government-sounding label and a countdown timer. It is designed to be invisible until it is too late to do anything about it, and designed to feel urgent enough that you just pay it and move on.
The people this hits hardest are the ones who can least afford it. A family watching their budget closely, a couple saving up for a special day out, someone who specifically compared prices before choosing SeaWorld. All of them saw a price that was not real, chose based on that price, and only found out the truth after the clock had started counting down against them.
The Checkout Trap: Seven Screens, One Scheme
The complaint reconstructs SeaWorld’s checkout flow across seven documented screens, labeled Figures 1 through 7. The sequence tells the whole story of how the deception was structured.
- Screen 1 (Figure 1): The main page of seaworld.com/san-diego/ shows a “Buy Tickets” button. No price is displayed yet. No fee is mentioned.
- Screen 2 (Figure 2): The consumer selects the number of tickets she wants. A per-ticket price is shown. No fees appear anywhere on this screen.
- Screen 3 (Figure 3): After clicking “Add to Cart,” a pop-up offers additional items. The subtotal shown reflects only the base ticket price. Still no fees.
- Screen 4 (Figure 4): A corner pop-up displays the ticket and subtotal from the customer’s selections. The complaint notes explicitly that “throughout the checkout process, the prices displayed to the consumer have not included any fees.”
- Screen 5 (Figure 5): The consumer clicks “Checkout.” For the first time, a $10.99 “Taxes & Fees” line item appears in the Order Summary. This is the first moment any fee is disclosed. If the customer hovers over the information icon, they see the explanation: the charge “covers taxes and administrative processing costs.” This language implies a government component. There is none.
- Screen 6 (Figure 6): A twelve-minute countdown timer appears. The customer now has a forced deadline to complete or abandon the purchase. The complaint frames this timer as a mechanism that works together with the late fee disclosure to prevent customers from comparison shopping.
- Screen 7 (Figure 7): Buried on this same cart page, SeaWorld quietly discloses that the $10.99 is categorized as all “Fees” with zero “Taxes.” The label “Taxes & Fees” was false from the start. There were never any taxes in the calculation.
The complaint also surfaces a specific legal promise SeaWorld makes and then breaks. Under California’s Ticket Seller Law, a seller cannot advertise a ticket at a specific price and then fail to deliver it at that price. SeaWorld’s checkout explicitly told customers their ticket would be held at the advertised price for ten minutes. But within that very same window, the company charged more than the advertised price. The complaint describes this as SeaWorld “systematically fail[ing] to deliver on that promise.”
Legal Receipts: What the Complaint Actually Says
The complaint, filed January 7, 2026, contains direct language that establishes both the mechanics of the scheme and its legal status under California law. Here are the key statements, sourced verbatim from Case No. 3:26-cv-00090-BTM-BLM.
“Defendant even though it initially tells consumers that a sum certain will be charged it ‘Taxes & Fees,’ it does not give consumers a breakdown of how much is taxes and how much is fees. After a consumer clicks the ‘Checkout’ button, Defendant reveals no taxes were charged at all, and the entire amount was Defendant’s Service Fee.” Complaint ¶ 5, Case No. 3:26-cv-00090
- This passage proves that SeaWorld collected the fee under a label that it knew to be false. The company did not accidentally combine tax and fee language; it specifically chose not to give customers a breakdown, ensuring they could not see that the “Taxes” portion was zero.
- It also establishes that the deception was structural, baked into the checkout flow, not a one-time glitch or display error.
“Defendant puts consumers on a shot-clock, requiring them to make their purchase within twelve minutes.” Complaint ¶ 19, Case No. 3:26-cv-00090
- This establishes that the timer was not a neutral security feature. It functioned as a psychological mechanism designed to work alongside the late fee disclosure to prevent customers from doing the one thing that would hurt SeaWorld: comparing prices with competitors.
- The complaint names specific competing venues, including Birch Aquarium and Sea Life Aquarium, to show that real alternatives existed and that price comparison was possible, but only if customers had been given enough time and honest pricing upfront.
“Defendant willfully employed a scheme designed to advertise a price that is not the true cost of the tickets, and did so willfully, wantonly, and with reckless disregard for the truth.” Complaint ¶ 48, Case No. 3:26-cv-00090
- The word “willfully” appears twice in this sentence. That is legally significant. It elevates the conduct beyond negligence or error and opens the door to punitive damages at trial.
- “Reckless disregard for the truth” is a standard courts use in fraud analysis. The complaint is asserting that this was a deliberate, designed scheme, not a sloppy or careless practice.
“No reasonable consumer would expect the ‘Checkout’ button to reveal an unlawful fee in addition to lawful sales tax and shipping costs.” Complaint ¶ 46, Case No. 3:26-cv-00090
- This is the complaint’s anchor claim under the CLRA. The “reasonable consumer” standard is what California courts use to determine whether a practice is deceptive. By stating this affirmatively, the complaint is setting up the argument that any ordinary person going through SeaWorld’s checkout would have been misled.
- The complaint cites a supporting 2024 case, Watson v. Crumbl LLC, in which an Eastern California federal court found identical allegations sufficient to survive dismissal. SeaWorld cannot argue this theory is novel.
“On November 20, 2025, Plaintiff sent a demand letter to take corrective action. Defendant did not take such action.” Complaint ¶ 49, Case No. 3:26-cv-00090
- This matters for procedural reasons. California’s CLRA requires plaintiffs to give the company a chance to fix the problem before suing for damages. SeaWorld was warned, explicitly and in writing, and chose not to act. That decision is now part of the legal record.
Anatomy of the $10.99: How the Fee Was Hidden and Labeled
The $10.99 charge was a single line item in SeaWorld’s checkout. Beneath that single line, the complaint documents a deliberate labeling structure designed to mislead customers about what they were paying and who was collecting it.
- The label used throughout checkout was “Taxes & Fees.” The plural and the inclusion of the word “taxes” implies the charge has two components: one owed to a government authority, one owed to SeaWorld. Neither part of that implication was true.
- SeaWorld’s own tooltip described the charge as covering “taxes and administrative processing costs.” The complaint notes this language implies a government component. SeaWorld knows what “taxes” means to a consumer. It chose the word deliberately.
- The final screen (Figure 7) showed the true breakdown: zero taxes, 100% service fee. This information was available, but only to customers who scrolled or looked carefully enough inside a twelve-minute countdown window.
- No breakdown of how much of the $10.99 was taxes versus fees was ever provided before checkout. The complaint states this explicitly as a violation: consumers were told a “sum certain” would be charged as “Taxes & Fees” without any breakdown of the two components, meaning they could not evaluate what they were actually paying.
- The fee was never disclosed before the customer invested time selecting tickets, choosing quantities, navigating add-on screens, and clicking “Checkout.” This is the classic “drip pricing” structure: show a low number early, reveal the true number only after the consumer has already made a mental and practical commitment to the purchase.
Societal Impact Mapping
Public Health
Junk fees are not just a financial inconvenience. Research on economic stress documents a direct link between unexpected financial charges and anxiety, particularly among lower-income households. This case demonstrates how those harms compound.
- The complaint’s own framing acknowledges that the hidden fee and countdown timer “manipulate” consumers. Manipulation under time pressure is a recognized vector for stress and poor decision-making, particularly for people budgeting carefully for a family outing.
- The class is believed to include hundreds of thousands of customers. For families who already priced-compared to choose SeaWorld, the discovery of an undisclosed fee after checkout adds a specific, documented stressor: the feeling of having been tricked at the end of a decision already made.
- Low-income families visiting SeaWorld as a discretionary treat are the most vulnerable to this particular design. The time pressure prevents them from walking away, and the government-sounding fee label prevents them from recognizing they are being charged something discretionary rather than mandatory.
Economic Inequality
The structural design of this fee scheme extracted money from a broad population of consumers in small amounts, making individual legal action economically irrational while generating significant aggregate revenue for SeaWorld’s parent company, United Parks & Resorts, Inc.
- The aggregate amount in controversy exceeds $5,000,000, according to the complaint’s jurisdictional statement. This figure represents money taken from hundreds of thousands of individual customers, each charged $10.99 per transaction, most of whom had no practical way to contest the charge individually.
- The complaint specifically names competing venues, including Birch Aquarium and Sea Life Aquarium, and argues that hidden pricing prevented real price competition. When consumers cannot compare true total prices, market competition breaks down, and corporate fees can rise without natural market correction.
- The class action mechanism exists precisely because individual consumers cannot afford to litigate $10.99. The complaint acknowledges this: “each individual Class member may lack the resources to undergo the burden and expense of individual prosecution.” SeaWorld’s scheme was designed around this asymmetry.
- SeaWorld quietly changed its fee disclosure practice around July 1, 2024, without compensating any customer who was already charged under the old scheme. This means the company benefited from the scheme for years, fixed it when legal pressure mounted, and kept everything it collected in the meantime.
- The California Ticket Seller Law provides for double damages: two times the contracted ticket price, not just a refund of the fee. The law treats this kind of overcharge as serious enough to warrant a financial penalty beyond mere restitution, recognizing that consumers have little leverage against systematic small-dollar extraction.
The “Cost of a Life” Metric
What Now? The Resistance and the Watchlist
United Parks & Resorts, Inc. is the Delaware-incorporated parent company that owns SeaWorld San Diego and operates the website where this conduct occurred. The company is headquartered in Orlando, Florida. The complaint names no individual executives by name; accountability at this stage runs to the corporate entity and its legal representatives. The attorneys of record for the plaintiff are L. Timothy Fisher (State Bar No. 191626) and Stefan Bogdanovich (State Bar No. 324525) of Bursor & Fisher, P.A., Walnut Creek, California.
Regulatory Watchlist
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC): The FTC has published rules and guidance specifically targeting “drip pricing” and hidden fees in consumer transactions. This case is a documented example of both. File a complaint at ftc.gov/complaint.
- California Attorney General’s Office: The complaint alleges violations of California’s Ticket Seller Law and the CLRA. The AG’s office has independent authority to pursue enforcement actions against companies engaged in deceptive pricing at scale.
- California Department of Consumer Affairs: Ticket seller conduct in California falls within the scope of state consumer protection oversight. This agency can receive formal complaints about deceptive ticket sale practices.
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB): The CFPB has pursued junk fee investigations across multiple industries. Documented hidden-fee checkout schemes in high-volume consumer transactions are within its mandate.
What You Can Do Right Now
- If you purchased tickets from seaworld.com/san-diego/ during the applicable statute of limitations period, you may be a class member. You do not need to take any action to be included in the class, but you can contact Bursor & Fisher, P.A. at ltfisher@bursor.com or sbogdanovich@bursor.com to get information about the case.
- File a complaint with the FTC at ftc.gov/complaint describing SeaWorld’s hidden fee checkout design. Individual complaints create a regulatory paper trail that supports broader enforcement action.
- Share this case publicly and name the company directly. Corporate behavior changes faster when the public ledger of misconduct is visible. SeaWorld changed its checkout practice in July 2024, likely because scrutiny was building. That pressure came from people paying attention.
- Support mutual aid networks that help low-income families access entertainment and recreation without being forced into deceptive corporate checkout flows. Local community organizations, library-based free-activity programs, and community recreation departments provide alternatives that do not rely on junk-fee revenue models.
- Organize locally around junk fee legislation in your state. California’s Ticket Seller Law is the foundation of this lawsuit. States without equivalent statutes leave consumers with fewer tools. Contact your state representatives and ask where they stand on mandatory upfront fee disclosure for ticket sellers.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
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