NYC Secures $875K Settlement with HungryPanda Over Illegal Restaurant Overcharges

April 8, 2026
NYC Secures $875K Settlement with HungryPanda Over Illegal Restaurant Overcharges
  • New York City has reached a settlement with HungryPanda requiring restitution and civil penalties totaling more than $875,000 over illegal overcharges to hundreds of restaurants.

  • HungryPanda must pay more than $580,000 in restitution to over 380 restaurants and over $294,000 in civil penalties and fees, under the agreement.

  • City leaders, including the mayor and the deputy mayor for economic justice, described the settlement as a win for protecting small businesses and enforcing delivery-app laws.

  • The case references the city's Fee Cap Law, which limits delivery-app fees to 15% for delivery, 5% for basic services, and 3% for electronic processing, with higher caps only in limited scenarios.

  • The filing emphasizes transparency and accountability in how delivery apps price and disclose fees to restaurants.

  • This action is part of a broader NYC push to shield small, immigrant-owned restaurants from predatory app-fees, following a separate $5 million settlement earlier this year involving Uber Eats, Fantuan, and HungryPanda that affected thousands of workers.

  • Eyewitness News has sought comment from HungryPanda and is awaiting a response.

  • As part of the settlement, HungryPanda must comply with the Fee Cap Law, implement clear disclosures, establish internal compliance policies and training, and submit annual compliance certifications.

  • This marks the DCWP’s first enforcement of the Fee Cap Law against a delivery app for harming business owners.

  • The overcharges occurred from early 2022 through late 2024, a period when pandemic-era caps were in effect before the cap rose to 43% on June 30, 2025.

  • The settlement follows a separate January deal in which Uber Eats, Fantuan, and HungryPanda agreed to $5.1 million impacting thousands of delivery workers.

  • City officials announced the settlement at a public event, underscoring NYC’s commitment to fee transparency and protecting small businesses.

Summary based on 2 sources


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