Federal regulators have set their sights on one of the MLM world’s most recognizable faces. The Federal Trade Commission filed a complaint on April 13, 2026, against motivational speaker and wellness coach Stormy Wellington, alleging that she used deceptive income claims over the course of her more than two-decade career to recruit people into multilevel marketing ventures.
The motivational speaker and longtime MLM recruiter has reached a proposed settlement with the federal agency after allegations that she misled thousands of followers with inflated income promises. The complaint alleges Wellington misled potential recruits about how much money they could realistically earn by joining programs she promoted. According to the FTC, many of those who signed up ultimately made little to nothing.
Two companies at the center of the case
The federal agency’s complaint zeroes in on Wellington’s recruitment work for two companies specifically, Total Life Changes (TLC), a health and wellness brand, and Farmasi, a cosmetics company. The FTC alleges she promoted both with income claims that were far removed from what most participants actually experienced.
Income disclosure statements from both companies paint a very different picture than the one Wellington allegedly presented to recruits. TLC’s own 2023 figures show that 76.8% of active participants received no compensation at all. At Farmasi, fewer than 1% of participants earned six figure incomes a stark contrast to the five, six, and even seven-figure earnings Wellington allegedly promised in her promotional content.
Among those affected was a former recruit named Effie Best, who says she walked away with just $28.10 after years of involvement and losses exceeding $5,000. Her experience underscores the financial toll that overstated income projections can have on everyday people trying to improve their circumstances.
What the settlement requires
Wellington has since signed an agreement with the FTC as part of a proposed settlement. Under its terms, she is prohibited from making unsubstantiated or misleading income claims in connection with any business opportunity. She is also required to disclose these restrictions to her own recruits going forward, meaning anyone she brings into a business venture must be made aware of the limitations placed on her promotional activity.
The settlement does not include a monetary penalty, but the restrictions on her recruiting language represent a meaningful shift in how she will be permitted to operate publicly.
Her response to the allegations
Wellington addressed the situation in an interview with Fox 26 Houston, expressing surprise at the complaint and acknowledging that her messaging would need to change as a result. She has continued posting to social media since the complaint went public, sharing motivational content with her large following, which includes many African American women who have long looked to her for business guidance and personal encouragement.
A wider conversation about MLM transparency
Wellington’s case is arriving at a moment when regulators are paying closer attention to the gap between what MLM recruiters promise and what participants actually earn. The FTC has been increasingly active in pursuing enforcement actions against income-related deception in the direct sales space, and Wellington’s situation is among the more high-profile examples to emerge in recent years.
For the many people particularly women seeking financial independence who are drawn to MLM based opportunities, the case is a pointed reminder to look carefully at official income disclosure statements before committing time or money to any program. Those documents, which companies are required to publish, often reveal earnings realities that differ significantly from the figures cited in recruitment pitches.
Wellington built a devoted following by presenting herself as proof that ordinary people could achieve extraordinary financial results. How she rebuilds that relationship with her audience now with clear boundaries around what she can claim will be closely watched in the months ahead.

