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E-commerce Refund Rights: Get Your Money Back

Amazon $2.5B FTC settlement, 180-day PayPal protection, 90-day Amazon A-to-Z guarantee, 60-day chargeback rights, EU 14-day cooling-off period, FTC Mail Order Rule 30-day delivery deadline, item not received claims, SNAD disputes, digital goods refunds, cross-border transactions.

$2.5B
Amazon Prime FTC Settlement ($1.5B Refunds - Subscription Traps, 2025)
180 Days
PayPal Buyer Protection Window (Item Not Received - File Within 6 Months)
90 Days
Amazon A-to-Z Guarantee (Third-Party Sellers - 90% Success Rate INR)
$337M
FTC Consumer Refunds 2024 (E-commerce Enforcement - Mail Order Rule)

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The E-commerce Refund Crisis: $100 Billion in Chargebacks, Rising Fraud, and Your Rights

Online shopping has exploded, but so have refund disputes. In 2024, merchants paid over $100 billion in chargebacks, with e-commerce chargebacks surging 222% from Q1 2023 to Q1 2024. At the same time, 79% of merchants report experiencing "friendly fraud" - illegitimate chargeback claims by consumers who received items but dispute the charge anyway.

But you have powerful rights. The FTC Mail, Internet, or Telephone Order Merchandise Rule requires sellers to ship within 30 days or refund you. Amazon's A-to-Z Guarantee gives you 90 days to dispute third-party seller transactions. PayPal's Buyer Protection covers you for 180 days for items not received. eBay's Money Back Guarantee protects virtually all purchases within 30 days. And your credit card's chargeback rights provide a final safety net for up to 120 days.

Your Main Protections

  • FTC Mail Order Rule: 30-day delivery or refund required
  • Platform Guarantees: Amazon (90d), eBay (30d), PayPal (180d)
  • Credit Card Chargebacks: Up to 120 days dispute window
  • EU/UK 14-Day Cooling-Off: Mandatory for distance sales

Recent Major Settlements

  • Amazon Prime: $2.5B FTC settlement ($1.5B refunds)
  • Fortnite: $520M for unwanted charges
  • American Screening: $14.6M for delivery delays
  • FTC 2024: $337M distributed in consumer refunds

Important Warning

Friendly fraud is eroding legitimate consumer protections. Filing chargebacks for items you received (claiming non-delivery when the item arrived) is wire fraud, a federal crime. Only file chargebacks for legitimate disputes with proper documentation.

Step-by-Step Action Plan

Follow these steps in order to maximize your chances of getting a refund:

1
Contact Seller Directly

Timeline: Within 24-48 hours of identifying issue

Send a clear, professional email or platform message stating:

  • Order number and date
  • Specific problem (defective, not received, SNAD)
  • Desired resolution (full refund to original payment method)
  • Reasonable deadline for response (3-5 business days)

Success Rate: 60-70% of issues resolved at this stage

2
Document Everything

Create a comprehensive evidence folder:

  • Order confirmation and receipt
  • Screenshots of original product listing
  • All communications with seller (emails, messages)
  • Photos/videos of defect or received item vs listing
  • Tracking information showing non-delivery
  • Credit card statement showing charge

Critical: This documentation is required for all escalation methods

3
File Platform Dispute

Timeline: If seller doesn't respond within 5-7 days or refuses refund

Amazon A-to-Z

90-day window
90% success rate for INR

eBay Money Back

30-day window
88% success rate

PayPal Protection

180-day window
85% success rate for INR

4
File Credit Card Chargeback

Timeline: If platform dispute fails or no platform protection

Call your card issuer within 60 days (up to 120 days for some issuers)

  • Reason codes: 13.1 (merchandise not received), 13.3 (not as described)
  • Provide all documentation gathered in Step 2
  • Temporary credit typically within 10 business days
  • Final decision within 60-90 days

Success Rate: 85% for INR, 75% for SNAD with good documentation

5
Report to Authorities

File complaints with regulatory agencies (even if you got your refund):

  • FTC: ReportFraud.ftc.gov (contributes to enforcement actions)
  • State Attorney General: Consumer protection division
  • BBB: BBB.org (public record, 70% resolution rate)
  • CFPB: ConsumerFinance.gov (for payment processor issues)

Your complaint helps regulators identify patterns and take enforcement action

Platform-Specific Buyer Protection

Amazon A-to-Z Guarantee

For third-party sellers on Amazon

Window:
90 days
Success Rate (INR):
90%+

How to File:

  1. Your Orders → Problem with order
  2. Contact seller first (48-hour wait)
  3. File claim with documentation
  4. Amazon reviews within 5 business days

Tip: If seller doesn't respond in 5 days, Amazon auto-approves buyer claim

eBay Money Back Guarantee

Covers virtually all eBay purchases

Window:
30 days
Success Rate (INR):
88%

How to File:

  1. Purchase History → Return this item
  2. Contact seller first (3-day wait)
  3. Ask eBay to step in with evidence
  4. eBay decides within 48 hours

Warning: Filing credit card chargeback closes eBay case - choose one path

PayPal Buyer Protection

Covers eligible PayPal purchases

Window (INR):
180 days
Success Rate (INR):
85%

How to File:

  1. Activity → Report a Problem
  2. Open dispute (20-day negotiation)
  3. Escalate to claim if unresolved
  4. PayPal decides within 30 days

Tip: 180-day window is longer than most platforms - use for older purchases

Credit Card Chargeback

Final safety net for all purchases

Window:
60-120 days
Success Rate (INR):
85%

How to File:

  1. Call number on back of card
  2. Request chargeback for reason code
  3. Submit all documentation
  4. Temporary credit within 10 days

Note: Most issuers require filing within 60 days - don't wait

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Frequently Asked Questions

Comprehensive answers to common e-commerce refund questions

What are my refund rights for online purchases?

How long does an online seller have to issue a refund?

Can an online store refuse to give me a refund?

What is the difference between a refund and store credit?

Can I dispute a charge if I don't receive a refund?

What are my rights if the seller goes out of business?

Do restocking fees violate my consumer rights?

Can I return sale or clearance items?

What if the seller has a "no refunds" policy?

How do I get a refund for a faulty product bought online?

What are my rights for digital products and subscriptions?

Can I get a refund if I simply changed my mind?

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