AT&T Reduced Trade-In Credit from $1,100 to $95 After Submission
A customer was promised $1,100 in trade-in credit for their phone but received only $95 after the device was already surrendered, with no recourse or return option. Monthly charges exceeded the expected post-promotion amount for several months. This is a pattern of telecom bait-and-switch, but no software solution addresses the core dispute resolution gap.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyAT&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.
Telecom trade-in credits stop applying when warehouse disputes device receipt
AT&T trade-in credits are applied for two months then halted when the warehouse claims it never received a device that tracking confirms was delivered. Consumers are forced into lengthy claims processes with no outcome while being billed full device price. The gap between carrier app tracking data and warehouse records leaves customers with no reliable resolution path.
AT&T Honors Only Half of Promised Trade-In Promotion Credit
A customer who traded in a device expecting $700 in promotional credits received only $350, with no explanation and repeated delays in resolution. Carrier trade-in promotions involve complex eligibility criteria and credit application timelines that are frequently misapplied. Consumers have no reliable mechanism to enforce promotional credit commitments after the trade-in completes.
Telecom carriers fail to honor promotional trade-in credits
Customers are systematically issued lower bill credits than verbally promised during trade-in promotions. Despite repeated contacts, representatives decline to apply the correct amount, leaving customers financially harmed with no clear resolution path. The gap between promised and applied credits can persist across multiple billing cycles.
AT&T Rejects Trade-Ins After Promising Free Phone Upgrades, Charging Full Price
AT&T sales staff promise free phone upgrades contingent on trade-ins but later reject the trade-in device, billing customers the full retail price without recourse. Customers discover the $1,100+ charge after the fact with no path to reverse it. This is a systemic deceptive promotion practice in telecom retail sales that affects a large volume of device upgrade customers.
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