Anonymous wrote:I'm going to be honest-- maybe no one else does this and I'm a terrible person, but if and only IF it is a big retailer like Amazon, Giant Food, etc., with which I shop frequently...
Most of the time I just chalk it up to "sometimes the bank error is in their favor, sometimes it's in mine" and don't say anything. It's generally way too much of a hassle to deal with small errors on both ends.
Giant accidentally gave me an extra bottle of seltzer in my pickup order? Well, last month they gave me a pound of grapes that was partly moldy-- I only ate half of them and I didn't complain for a refund.
Amazon refunded me $17 more than they should have? Well, in December they shipped me something poorly packaged such that it was partly damaged, but it was only an aesthetic thing, so I let it go, and in November they sent something that was the wrong size, but it kinda worked out, and in October they sent a pack of 12 that was only 11 and I didn't complain. So it's a wash to me.
I get that the world would possibly be a slightly better place if I complained and got refunded every single time, and I let them know every time they gave me more than I deserved-- because hopefully they'd make improvements to their processes, etc.
But.... meh.
Anonymous wrote:I have reported similar and they don't care. On the flip side, sometimes reporting things can make it worse like if they actually charge you again, it will be for $50 and not just $25.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, say something OP. Do the right thing.
If you bring it up and they don't correct it, then I may leave it alone because at least you gave it a shot to have things fixed. No need to bring it up multiple times. But do contact them once to do the honest and ethical thing, so at the very least you can have a clean conscience.
But but the retailer pays the people in a third world country who make the shirts a pittance with no worker rights.