This analysis describes what Plaid's agreement states, permits, or reserves. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Regulatory applicability and practical outcomes may vary by jurisdiction, enforcement context, and individual circumstances. Read our methodology
Developers who use Plaid's services now face expanded accountability for all activities on their accounts and stricter rules around who can access end-user financial data. If developers allow employees, contractors, or other agents to access their accounts, they must ensure those users only access data for approved business purposes and in compliance with Plaid's terms; Plaid reserves the right to monitor this activity through session replay and activity monitoring. Developers should audit which team members have account access, document the business need and approved use case for each, and ensure all authorized users understand their obligations under Plaid's terms.
View change record →Plaid's updated terms shift its business model from primarily connecting your accounts to third-party apps toward also providing direct consumer services, including account monitoring and alerts through a new web-based platform called Plaid Web-App. The terms now specify that your Plaid Account can store your financial and identity information, and that Plaid can use this data to provide its own streamlined services (like alerts and notifications) in addition to facilitating third-party app connections. This is not a privacy reduction, but a clarification that Plaid is now a service provider in its own right, not just an intermediary. You may want to review what the Plaid Web-App monitoring service entails and what data it collects, since it is a new direct service from Plaid rather than a third-party app feature.
View change record →Plaid has reframed its service model to emphasize a direct relationship between you and Plaid, rather than positioning itself primarily as a bridge to third-party apps. This means Plaid now states it provides services directly to you when you request them. Additionally, Plaid has introduced a new account monitoring and alerts service available via a web application directly to consumers, separate from third-party app integrations. The terms clarify that your Plaid Account remains non-transactional and does not store funds or enable direct payments, but now explicitly mentions it helps third-party apps initiate payments to or from you. You may wish to review the new web-based monitoring service offering and understand what account data it accesses and how it uses that data.
View change record →How other platforms handle this
You must return the item to Ledger... without undue delay and in any event no later than fourteen days after you have let Ledger know of your decision to withdraw from this agreement.
We will issue a refund within three Business Days of receiving your request, provided that the funds have not been picked up by the designated recipient prior to our receipt of your request for a refund.
Upon verification that Buyer has picked up the purchased Item within five (5) days from the date the purchased Item is made available for pickup, the Shipping Fee will be refunded to Buyer within a reasonable time period.
Monitoring
Plaid has changed this document before.
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"We will investigate your claim for a refund of unauthorized or incorrectly executed Transactions, provided that you have notified us without undue delay upon becoming aware of such incorrectly executed or unauthorized Transaction, and in any case within the timeframes required by the Card Scheme rules...— Excerpt from Plaid's Plaid Terms of Use (Legal Index)
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The clause states: “We will investigate your claim for a refund of unauthorized or incorrectly executed Transactions, provided that you have notified us without undue delay upon becoming aware of such incorrectly executed or unauthorized Transaction, and in any case within the timeframes required by the Card Scheme rules...”
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