How to Cancel Norton

If Norton is making it hard to stop a recurring charge, federal law is on your side. Describe what happened below and get a free, ready-to-send letter.

Why this works

The Restore Online Shoppers' Confidence Act (ROSCA, 15 U.S.C. § 8403) is a federal statute requiring any company that sells subscriptions online to provide simple mechanisms to stop recurring charges. The FTC actively enforces it — including a $2.5 billion settlement with Amazon in 2025 over its Prime cancellation flow. Many states add their own auto-renewal laws on top. If Norton requires a phone call, an in-person visit, or a maze of retention screens to cancel something you signed up for online in minutes, a letter that names the statute usually gets a faster, more serious response than another support ticket.

What to do

  1. Try canceling through Norton's normal online process first, and note exactly where it breaks down.
  2. Use the form above to generate a formal letter citing federal law — free, no account needed.
  3. Send it to Norton's customer support (email is usually easiest) and request written confirmation.
  4. If they don't respond within a reasonable time, you can also file a complaint directly with the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov.

FAQ

Is this legal advice? No — this tool generates a letter based on what you tell it and general consumer-protection law. Review it, fill in any placeholders, and confirm the facts before sending. See our Terms.

Does this cost anything? No, the letter generator is free.

Does FeesShield contact Norton for me? No — you send the letter yourself. FeesShield only generates it.