There is considerable dissatisfaction among T-Mobile customers who are the claimants of a high-profile class-action suit that claims that the Telecommunications company offered a gift card promotion of $200 but it was not true. 

The suit was filed in the Riverside County Superior Court, Case No. 5:25-cv-03031, which argues that the consumer promotional efforts by the carrier misled the consumers to buy new lines and then withdraw the promised incentives.

The Deceptive Deal

Plaintiff Purya Best states the ad that led him to purchase an offer of a $200 card upon each new line, which a representative of the store approved. After the buy, the company reportedly rejected the promotion claiming it was nonexistent. 

Ghrabeti is aiming to represent every California buyer who was defrauded of the promised benefits since the introduction of the offer. The advice used by Todd, M. Friedman, P. C. as false advertising in breach of the state law in which there is an attempt to exaggerate the sales with arranged benefits being fake.

Psychological Pressure on T-Mobile

The problems facing the carrier are the compounding ones. Two months prior T-Mobile was being sued on another Californian lawsuit alleging it raised the prices of its lifelong plans with no customer permission, which according to an annual report from the Commission for Complaints for Telecom-television Services (CCTS), Canadians filed a record 23,647 complaints against their telecom companies last year.

However, T-Mobile (TMUS) now expects $80.5 billion to $81.5 billion in service revenue for 2027. Analysts tracked by FactSet were looking for $80.2 billion. While the company didn’t offer guidance on postpaid phone net additions for 2026, it said to expect between 900,000 and 1 million postpaid net account additions for the year. 

Accounts can have multiple subscribers, which is why Chief Financial Officer Peter Osvaldik told MarketWatch that this metric “correlates best with value creation,” in his view.

What Lies Ahead

Ghrabeti warrants restitution, injunction, and trial by jury. T-Mobile should respond swiftly to these accusations or it will face further inquiries by FCC and decrease of its stock price, which has already dropped after filing. 

In the case of its users, it may be translated into a real compensation; the stakeholders must keep an eye on the upcoming opt-in dates. Hardly anything is better than being transparent and ensuring proactive remediation, which will prevent the further litigation.

Komal Zara

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