Sony is facing a brand-new lawsuit tied to recent price increases of the PlayStation 5 console and changes made to United States tariffs. The lawsuit alleges that Sony is set to hold on to a significant amount of money following the United States’ tariff refunds, and claims that they should instead go to the consumers who paid those increased prices.

Tariffs enacted in 2025 by the Trump administration in the US have largely been shut down at this point, with the Supreme Court declaring the IEEPA tariffs unconstitutional. Since then, a method for companies to file claims to refund the tariff cost has been offered, which is where this new lawsuit against Sony comes into play.

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Sony Facing New Lawsuit Due to Tariffs

Now, a new class action lawsuit has been filed against Sony, alleging that Sony is gaining a “significant windfall generated by unlawful tariffs.” In other words, the lawsuit claims that Sony raised the price of the PlayStation 5 to compensate for tariffs, and is now going to get tariff refunds from the government, but isn’t passing them along to the consumers who paid extra for PlayStation consoles during that period of time. If accurate, that would mean that Sony is profiting twice, first from the increased cost of the PlayStation 5 family of consoles, and again from the tariffs being refunded. The lawsuit claims that all consumers who purchased PlayStation 5 consoles at the increased price following the introduction of the tariffs are owed refunds for the extra cost.

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Sony has been the target of a number of lawsuits in recent years, even prior to the tariffs going into effect. Sony has faced class action lawsuits over the PlayStation Store’s pricing, controller drift, and it’s faced a lawsuit from an Ex-Destiny developer. Some of these have been dismissed, like the controller drift lawsuit, but one lawsuit which accused Sony of limiting third-party sales on its platforms, and thereby creating a monopoly, recently came to an end. In that particular case, a preliminary settlement will see Sony pay $7.8 million to those impacted.

Image via Sony

With that said, this issue is far from limited to Sony, or even video game and console manufacturers. Nintendo is also facing a tariff lawsuit for largely the same reason, indicating that the money Nintendo gets back from tariff refunds should be given to its consumers. Amazon, Nike, and Adidas are currently being sued for the same reason, and shipping companies like UPS and FedEx, which also faced legal threats, have promised to see their tariff refunds routed to impacted customers.

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At this time, it remains to be seen how Sony will respond to the lawsuit, and whether players will eventually get their money back. The implementation of these tariffs has clearly created a messy situation for companies and consumers alike, and it could take some time before all the refunds are issued to companies that file for them. It also remains unclear how much PlayStation fans could expect to get if the lawsuit is successful or Sony pledges to refund consumers. Whether Sony freely chooses to refund customers of the extra they paid due to tariffs or the lawsuit continues, it will likely be some time before this problem is resolved for everyone who was impacted.

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