Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter if her neighbor owes her $0.30, $30.00, or $300. You pay your debts!
Anonymous wrote:Stick a Post-it note on the receipt with your Venmo or PayPal information and say hope you had a good vacation. Here’s the receipt for the shipping.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with receipt and venmo info on a post-it with 'hope you had a great time!'
They are likely busy/not prioritizing it and I know for me- I like easy/this makes it easy.
Anonymous wrote:unless you are in rough financial shape i would not ask someone to reimburse you $30. just next time this happens with them say you are slammed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d text them and say, “Glad I could help you out with the package. The shipping was $30 and my Venmo is [x]. Hope you had a great trip!”
Agree. They want to pay you, they may have forgotten
Anonymous wrote:Our neighbors returned from a vacation one week ago. After the left for their vacation, they called to ask if I would do them a favor. They had left an important item behind and wondered if I would overnight it to them. I happily helped them out. It cost $30 to ship it, plus my time, and while I didn’t mind helping them out, it’s been a week since they returned and they’ve made no efforts to try to reimburse me the money. Not sure if it slipped their mind, but I’m not sure how it could have since it was of great importance to their trip. I know how it is when you return from a vacation and have laundry/shopping/yard work to tend to so I said I’d give it a week, and here we are. How should I phrase it to them without sounding cheap or needy? “Do you mind paying me back now” just sounds weird to me. I can’t believe I’m even asking this! It seems so simple!
Anonymous wrote:I’d text them and say, “Glad I could help you out with the package. The shipping was $30 and my Venmo is [x]. Hope you had a great trip!”
Anonymous wrote:Stick a Post-it note on the receipt with your Venmo or PayPal information and say hope you had a good vacation. Here’s the receipt for the shipping.