AT&T Internet Air Continues Billing After Cancellation and Equipment Return
Customers who cancel AT&T Internet Air service and return equipment are still billed a month later with bots unable to locate their account to resolve the issue. The inability to reach effective support compounds the billing error. This reflects a recurring pattern of post-cancellation billing failures at AT&T.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyTelecom Providers Continue Billing After Cancellation Requests Despite Confirmation
Customers cancelling telecom services find that single cancellation requests are insufficient, requiring multiple contacts over weeks before the service is actually terminated. Despite formal cancellation, billing continues for services not used. This pattern suggests intentional friction in cancellation workflows that exploits customer inertia.
AT&T Continues Charging Customers for Months After Cancellation Attempts
AT&T customers who stopped using services and attempted to cancel through multiple channels — store visits, phone, and online — continued to be charged for months after the intended cancellation date. The inability to complete a cancellation despite documented efforts constitutes unauthorized billing that is difficult to reverse without significant escalation. This pattern is widespread across major US telecom carriers and represents a structural consumer protection failure.
Post-Cancellation Billing Errors Are Widespread in Telecom
Telecom providers continue billing customers after confirmed account cancellations and add late fees on top. The cancellation process lacks reliable confirmation mechanisms that prevent downstream billing errors. Customers are left disputing charges for services they explicitly terminated.
AT&T continues billing for returned equipment
A customer reports AT&T continuing to bill for an internet unit that was already returned and tracked as delivered, with hours spent unable to resolve it through support. This reflects a billing reconciliation failure on the provider side.
AT&T Service Cancellation Requires Multiple Calls with No Confirmation
AT&T fails to process cancellation requests reliably — calls drop mid-process, no confirmation is issued, and the service continues billing months later. Customers must make repeated contacts with no guarantee the request will be honored.
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