Home Depot Refuses Refund for Lost Shipment, Misclassifying It as a Return
A customer whose Home Depot order was lost in transit was denied a refund on the grounds that the third-party Retail Equation system blocked it — a policy designed for returns, not delivery failures. The retailer effectively offloaded liability for a carrier failure onto the buyer. This reflects a systemic gap in e-commerce lost-shipment accountability at large retailers.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyHome Depot Denies Refund for Online Order Lost After Delivery Confirmation
A Home Depot online order was marked as delivered but never received, and the retailer refused multiple refund requests. The inability to resolve a clear lost-package dispute leaves customers financially exposed to carrier and retailer handoff failures. This is a recurring gap in large retailer post-delivery accountability.
E-commerce retailers lose packages with no resolution path
Customers who purchase from large online retailers experience lost shipments where neither the retailer nor the carrier takes ownership, leaving buyers in an indefinite waiting loop with no refund or replacement. Customer service escalation paths are circular and provide no resolution.
Retailer and Carrier Blame-Shift Leaves Customers Without Refunds
When online orders go missing in transit, retailers and carriers each deflect responsibility, leaving buyers in an unresolvable loop. Neither party has incentive to own the resolution, and customers lack the tools to escalate effectively. This is a structural gap in last-mile accountability for e-commerce.
Home Depot fails to deliver and blocks refund for months
A customer never received an online order and was denied a refund for over two months despite multiple contacts. Home Depot's escalation path directs customers to a third-party claims company rather than resolving internally. The experience represents a systemic failure in e-commerce post-purchase dispute resolution.
Home Depot refund not issued 2 weeks after confirmed wrong-item return
After receiving the wrong item, a Home Depot return was confirmed picked up but the refund was not processed for over two weeks. Customer service redirected the customer between channels with no resolution and conflicting information.
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