Home Depot Refuses to Honor Clearly Advertised Battery Pricing at Point of Sale
Home Depot posted signage advertising batteries at $99 for two but refused to honor that price at checkout, with store management denying the advertised promotion. This is a retail false advertising pattern with no in-store resolution path. Limited third-party software solution potential.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyHome Depot In-Store Price Tags Do Not Match Actual Product Pricing at Checkout
Home Depot customers encounter shelf pricing that does not reflect actual purchase price, constituting false advertising. Store clerks cannot locate advertised products or honor posted prices. Retail price accuracy is a consumer protection issue with limited third-party remediation.
Home Depot Mislabels Clearance Items and Refuses to Honor Listed Price
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Home Depot Cancels Order Without Notice After Pricing Error
A customer confirmed stepping stones at a Spring Black Friday discounted price, only to have the order cancelled without notification due to a glitch. The store manager refused to honor the confirmed price. Reflects inadequate pricing error communication and dispute resolution in large-format retail.
Home Depot Charges Customers for Rental Contracts They Never Signed
Home Depot charged a customer $130.84 for another customer rental contract they never authorized, discovered only after the charge appeared on their card. The unauthorized billing from a rental system confusion represents a serious payment security failure. No resolution path was provided through standard customer service.
AT&T Trade-In Discount Promised at Sale Never Applied to Account
AT&T customers completing device trade-ins discover months later that the promised discount was never applied to their billing account. There is no confirmation mechanism to verify the credit was activated at time of trade-in. Resolving the discrepancy requires significant customer effort.
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