AT&T Billing Errors and Line Assignments Uncorrectable Through Support
New AT&T customers face incorrect device line assignments and improper non-return fees that customer service refuses to correct. The inability to resolve clear carrier errors through official channels leaves customers with unexpected charges and no escalation path.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyAT&T Continues Billing Customers After Confirmed Device Returns
Customers who return devices within the required window continue to receive charges from AT&T despite confirmed receipt of the returned hardware. The carrier's internal reconciliation process fails to link return records to billing, leaving customers with thousands of dollars in erroneous charges. Disputes require repeated escalation with no guaranteed resolution.
AT&T Loses Trade-In Records and Charges Customers Full Price for Promised Credits
Customers who switch to AT&T based on trade-in credit promotions find the credits are never applied, with AT&T claiming no record of the trade-ins despite the customer having completed the required steps. Bills arrive significantly higher than promised, with no path to correction beyond lengthy dispute processes. The pattern suggests systemic trade-in tracking failures that disproportionately benefit the carrier.
AT&T Billed Customer $1,300 for Returned Trade-In Phone
Customer was charged $1,300 for a phone they had already turned in for trade-in, prompting a dispute.
AT&T Overcharges for Unactivated Phones and Adds Unexpected $685 Fee
A customer who activated only 2 of 4 new phones was charged for all 4 plus an unexpected $685 fee within the first 15 days of service. AT&T customer service failed to resolve the billing discrepancy which the customer describes as a scam. The pattern of unexplained charges erodes trust in the carrier's billing practices.
AT&T charges activation fees despite promising no fee for BYOD number port
AT&T customers who port numbers with their own unlocked devices are charged activation fees despite being explicitly promised there would be none during the transaction. This structural deceptive sales practice in telecom mirrors a broader pattern of carriers making promises they do not honor at billing.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.