Fashion Nova is facing fresh legal scrutiny over how it markets discounts, as a new class action settlement moves toward final approval in California.
The deal, which follows the FTC’s earlier crackdown on the brand’s suppressed product reviews, targets the retailer’s use of “limited‑time” sales and reference prices that allegedly overstated the depth and urgency of its promotions. In Dembiczak et al. v.
action alleges Fashion Nova advertised limited‑time sale prices that quietly continued after the supposed end date, and paired them with inflated “regular” prices to make discounts look deeper than they were. Fashion Nova disputes the claims and admits no wrongdoing, but has agreed to settle rather than fight it out in court.
The proposed deal is narrowly targeted but symbolically loud. If approved, Fashion Nova will issue a $12 voucher to every eligible customer with a billing address in Washington, Oregon, or California who bought through fashionnova.com or its app between September 17, 2018 and May 20, 2025.
That is not life‑changing relief for individual shoppers, but multiplied across a multi‑year, three‑state class, it represents millions of dollars in “make‑good” value and a public reminder that discount design is now a compliance issue. Timing matters here.
The original deadline for class members to object or opt out was February 12, 2026, but the court has allowed supplemental notice for consumers who were missed the first time. Those shoppers now have until April 11, 2026 to respond, with a final approval hearing set for May 1, 2026 in San Diego. That puts this…