Retailer parcel refund guides
Retailer parcel refund guides explain how to handle missing, damaged, late, stolen or disputed deliveries from UK shops and marketplaces. Use them to match the complaint to the retailer's support flow, buyer-protection process, courier evidence and payment method. For most online purchases, the retailer or marketplace process is the first route before payment escalation.
Quick answer
For online purchases, the retailer or marketplace process is normally the first route. Use these pages to adapt the legal position to the seller's support flow, buyer-protection rules, courier mix and refund wording.
Which page should you use?
| Situation | Best route |
|---|---|
| The order was from Amazon, eBay, Vinted, Etsy or another marketplace. | Use the platform-specific guide first |
| The retailer says the courier has confirmed delivery. | Proof of delivery dispute |
| The retailer refuses a missing parcel refund. | Refund refused next steps |
| You paid by credit card or debit card and the retailer will not resolve it. | Section 75 and chargeback |
How to use retailer and marketplace refund guides
Where should a retailer parcel complaint start?
Retailer parcel disputes are different from pure courier claims because the shop, marketplace or platform sold you the goods. If the order is missing, damaged, late or marked delivered, the support journey usually starts with the retailer account, order page or marketplace case system. The courier may hold useful evidence, but the retailer is normally the business that can refund, replace, reopen an order investigation or explain why it is refusing.
This hub is for shoppers who want the practical route for a specific retailer or platform. Amazon, eBay, Vinted, Etsy, fashion retailers, supermarkets and white-goods retailers all have different support flows. Some rely heavily on delivery photos. Some ask you to wait for a courier investigation. Some move quickly to platform buyer protection. The underlying complaint should stay clear: what you ordered, what went wrong, what evidence exists, and what remedy you want.
When should you use a retailer-specific page?
Use a retailer guide when the seller says the courier has confirmed delivery but you still have no parcel. Use it when a marketplace seller asks you to contact the courier yourself. Use it when the retailer offers store credit instead of dealing with a missing or damaged order. Use it when a support ticket closes without answering your evidence. These situations need wording that fits the retailer's process while still keeping the complaint focused on the order.
The retailer guides also help with payment escalation. If the retailer refuses after a clear written complaint, your next route may depend on how you paid and whether the platform has its own buyer-protection process. The site does not tell users to jump straight to a bank claim. It encourages a written complaint first, then a proportionate next step if the retailer will not resolve the issue.
How does GetParcelRefund apply retailer context?
Example 1: an Amazon order says delivered, but the delivery photo shows a safe place you did not choose. The Amazon guide helps you gather the order page, photo and delivery instructions. GetParcelRefund can then generate wording that asks Amazon to review the delivery evidence and resolve the missing order through its support route before you consider payment escalation.
Example 2: a Vinted parcel is lost after handover and the seller says the courier must deal with it. The Vinted guide keeps the focus on the marketplace process, tracking trail and buyer-protection route. In the checker, those details help produce a complaint that explains the issue without pretending the buyer has a direct courier contract they may not have.
How should you document a retailer parcel complaint?
Retailer support teams respond better to a short evidence-led complaint than to a long message that mixes every possible legal route. Save screenshots of the order, tracking, support chat and any refusal reason. Say whether the parcel is missing, late, damaged, stolen after delivery or part of a lost return. Ask for a refund or replacement in plain language. If the retailer refuses, the next guide can help you decide whether to challenge the proof of delivery, write a stronger complaint, use platform protection or consider card escalation.
Guides in this section
Amazon parcel not received
Amazon order checks, delivery photos, A-to-Z Guarantee and refund steps.
Vinted parcel lost refund
Vinted buyer protection, tracking evidence and seller communication.
eBay item not received
eBay Money Back Guarantee, evidence and payment escalation.
ASOS
ASOS missing, late or damaged parcels under the Consumer Rights Act 2015.
Next
Next delivery problems including in-house drivers and CRA 2015.
Marks & Spencer
M&S missing or damaged parcels and refund steps.
Primark
Primark click-and-collect or home delivery problems.
Boohoo
Boohoo missing parcels, courier disputes and refund steps.
SHEIN
SHEIN cross-border refunds, chargeback and Consumer Rights Act 2015.
Temu
Temu Purchase Protection, CRA 2015 and chargeback for missing orders.
Zara
Zara missing or damaged parcels under UK consumer law.
H&M
H&M delivery disputes and Section 20 short-term reject right.
Argos
Argos missing parcels, store collection and same-day delivery.
John Lewis
John Lewis missing or damaged deliveries with in-house drivers and CRA 2015.
Very
Very delivery problems including BNPL refund considerations.
JD Sports
JD Sports missing or damaged orders and statutory rights.
Currys
Currys faulty appliances, in-house delivery and CRA 2015.
AO.com
AO white goods delivery problems and short-term reject right.
Etsy
Etsy Purchase Protection, marketplace rules and chargeback.
PrettyLittleThing
PLT missing or damaged parcels and refund steps.
Courier problem pages
If the retailer's answer depends on courier evidence, use the matching courier and problem guide alongside the retailer-specific route.
Delivered But Not Received
Late Delivery
Damaged Parcel
Parcel Stolen From Doorstep
Common mistakes to avoid
- Do not let the retailer redirect you permanently to the courier when the retailer arranged delivery.
- Do not miss marketplace dispute windows; platform buyer-protection clocks can close faster than a normal retailer complaint.
- Do not accept vouchers or store credit if your statutory remedy is a money refund.
Frequently asked questions
Why should I use a retailer guide instead of only a courier guide?
A retailer guide matches the support route for the business that sold you the goods. Courier evidence still matters, but the retailer or marketplace is usually the place to ask for the refund or replacement.
What if the retailer tells me to contact the courier?
You can ask the courier for evidence, but do not let that become a permanent redirect if the retailer arranged delivery. Keep your written complaint with the retailer and ask them to resolve the order.
Can GetParcelRefund handle marketplace orders?
Yes. The guidance includes marketplace routes such as Amazon, Vinted, eBay and Etsy. The checker uses your issue type, evidence and platform context to produce a practical complaint and escalation route.
When should I consider chargeback or Section 75?
Usually after a clear written complaint has been refused or ignored. The right payment route depends on how you paid, the order value and the facts of the dispute, so keep evidence of the retailer's final response.