Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 50— - SERVICEMEMBERS CIVIL RELIEF › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - RENT, INSTALLMENT CONTRACTS, MORTGAGES, LIENS, ASSIGNMENT, LEASES, COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE CONTRACTS › § 3956
Servicemembers may end certain consumer contracts early when they get orders to move for at least 90 days to a place that won’t support the service, or when they get a permanent change-of-station order and later a stop-movement order that blocks use of the service for at least 30 days or for an indefinite time. To end the contract, the servicemember must give written or electronic notice to the provider and include a copy of the military orders and the date service should stop. The provider must tell the servicemember in writing or electronically about these rights. People treated like servicemembers for this rule include a spouse or dependent of a member who dies on duty, a spouse or dependent when the member gets a catastrophic injury or illness on duty, certain reserve or Guard members on duty, and a spouse or dependent who moves with the servicemember. Covered contracts include 6 types of consumer services such as cell phone, landline, internet, subscription video, gym or fitness, and home security, if the contract started before the orders. Providers cannot charge an early termination fee, but the servicemember must pay any unpaid taxes or other charges that were due when the contract ended. If the servicemember’s move is 3 years or less, they may keep their phone number if they re-subscribe within 90 days after the move ends. If someone else signed the contract but named the servicemember as a beneficiary, that signer may cancel for the servicemember if the servicemember is eligible, or cancel for all named beneficiaries if all move with the servicemember. Providers must get back any paid fees for time after the termination within 60 days (except the rest of the billing period when the cancellation happens). Returned provider-owned equipment must be sent back within 10 days after service is cut off. Simple definitions: commercial mobile service = mobile phone service; military orders and permanent change of station = as defined in the law; multichannel video programming service = subscription TV service offered by a distributor; provider-owned consumer premises equipment = rented or loaned customer equipment like routers, modems, set-top boxes; telephone exchange service = basic landline phone service.
Full Legal Text
War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
50 U.S.C. § 3956
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73