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Contact Congress about H.R. 4528: Price Gouging Prevention Act of 2025

Companies could face new federal penalties for charging prices that are far too high, especially during major disruptions. The FTC and state officials could sue, and public companies would have to give investors more detail about price-driven profits after those events.

Modern Action explains legislation in plain English, helps you choose whether to support, oppose, or ask for changes, and drafts a message tied to the bill, your stance, and the elected officials who can act on it.

Price Gouging Prevention Act of 2025 is a House bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on Financial Services, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.

Latest action on H.R. 4528: Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on Financial Services, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.

Who this affects: This bill mainly affects consumers, large companies with pricing power, smaller businesses that may need to prove their costs went up, public companies that file reports with investors, and state and federal enforcers. People buying basic goods and services could feel the effects first if the law limits sharp price jumps during a crisis. Big firms and important middlemen in a supply chain could face the most legal risk. Public companies would also face new reporting work after a major market shock.

Why this matters: This bill matters because it could change how companies set prices when markets are under stress. Instead of leaving sharp price hikes mostly to state law, it would create a new federal rule and give the FTC and state officials stronger ways to enforce it. That could help some consumers when necessities get more expensive fast, but the real effect would depend on how the FTC writes the rules and how aggressively officials enforce them. The bill also gives investors more detail about whether company profits during a shock came from higher prices, higher sales, or higher costs.

Key provisions in H.R. 4528

  • Makes charging an extremely high price illegal. The FTC would write the detailed rules on what counts as grossly excessive.
  • Creates special rules for major market shocks. That includes natural disasters, public health emergencies, and declared federal disasters or emergencies.
  • Assumes some firms broke the law during a major market shock if they have unfair leverage and charge prices that run too high. The comparison looks at their own recent prices or competitors' prices, but they can try to rebut that presumption.
  • Defines unfair leverage with several tests. These include at least $1 billion in U.S. revenue last year, being a critical trading partner, having a dominant market position, or using unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices.
  • Lets smaller firms use a legal defense if they made under $100 million in U.S. revenue in the prior year, adjusted for inflation. They must show the price increase came straight from higher costs they could not control.

How Modern Action helps you take action on H.R. 4528

You do not have to start with a blank letter. Modern Action turns the bill, your position, and the relevant congressional context into a message you can edit and send. The goal is to make contacting Congress clear, specific, and useful without forcing you to parse bill text or figure out the right office on your own.

Questions people ask about H.R. 4528

What is H.R. 4528?
Companies could face new federal penalties for charging prices that are far too high, especially during major disruptions. The FTC and state officials could sue, and public companies would have to give investors more detail about price-driven profits after those events.
How do I support or oppose H.R. 4528?
Choose support, oppose, or ask for changes on Modern Action. The action flow drafts the message for you and keeps the wording tied to this bill.
Who should I contact about H.R. 4528?
Modern Action uses your location to route the action to the congressional offices relevant to the bill and your representation.
Can Modern Action explain H.R. 4528 before I act?
Yes. Modern Action gives you a plain-English summary, current status, and action context before you send anything.

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Related bills

  • Take action on S. 2321: Price Gouging Prevention Act of 2025