Telecom Ghost Billing Continues After In-Store Cancellations
Customers who cancel telecom service in person and return equipment with documented confirmation continue to receive charges to their bank accounts for months afterward. Internal system failures prevent cancellations from propagating to billing, and phone support refuses to acknowledge the paper trail. The burden of proof falls on the customer despite documented evidence of cancellation.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyXfinity Continues Billing Bank Accounts After Confirmed In-Store Service Cancellation
Xfinity customers who cancel service in person, return equipment, and receive email confirmation still find their bank accounts being charged in subsequent months. The company ignores cancellation records and demands payment, creating unauthorized transactions that require bank disputes to stop. This is a large-scale billing fraud pattern in cable service cancellation processing.
Comcast continued charging after Xfinity internet cancellation
Customer cancelled Xfinity internet on a specific date and was still charged afterward.
Xfinity charges account after cancellation despite equipment return
A customer who cancelled Xfinity service and returned equipment with receipt confirmation still had $92 charged to their account. Multiple chat confirmations of no further charges were ignored, and no refund was issued.
Xfinity Continues Charging Customers After Cancellation and Equipment Return
Xfinity bills customers for service months after they cancel and return all equipment. Customers must fight for refunds with no guarantee of success. The ISP near-monopoly in most regions means consumers cannot credibly threaten to switch.
Comcast continues charging after account cancellation
Customers who cancel Comcast service and return equipment continue to see charges on their credit cards. The dispute involves billing fraud and poor cancellation processes at a large ISP.
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