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How to Get a Refund from a Company with a No-Refunds Policy

Stuck with a no-refunds policy? Learn proven strategies to get your money back even when a company says all sales are final.

Last edited on May 26, 2026
4 min read

A company's refund policy says "all sales are final." Does that mean you are out of luck? Not necessarily. There are several legal and practical strategies that can get your money back even when the company says no.

When "No Refunds" Does Not Actually Mean No Refunds

A no-refund policy does not override your legal rights. You may still be entitled to a refund if:

  • The product is defective or not as described — consumer protection laws in most states require products to match their description
  • The service was never delivered — you cannot be charged for something you never received
  • The company used deceptive practices — misleading advertising, hidden fees, or bait-and-switch tactics
  • You were charged without proper authorization — unauthorized recurring charges or billing errors
  • State law provides a cooling-off period — some states mandate refund windows for certain purchases

Strategy 1: Know Your Legal Rights

Federal protections

The FTC's Mail Order Rule requires companies to ship products within the promised timeframe or offer a refund. The Fair Credit Billing Act protects credit card purchases.

State protections

Many states have consumer protection statutes that override company refund policies. California, New York, and several other states require businesses to clearly display refund policies and provide refunds under certain conditions regardless of stated policy.

Credit card chargebacks

Your credit card company can reverse charges for products not received, defective goods, or unauthorized transactions — regardless of the merchant's refund policy. You typically have 60 days from the statement date.

Strategy 2: Escalate Within the Company

  1. Start with customer service — state your case clearly and reference specific issues
  2. Ask for a supervisor — front-line agents often lack authority to override policies
  3. Contact the executive team — find executive emails on the company website or through LinkedIn
  4. Use social media — public complaints on Twitter/X often get faster responses
  5. Reference specific laws — mentioning the FTC or your state AG adds weight

Strategy 3: Use External Leverage

If the company will not budge:

  • File a credit card chargeback — your most powerful tool for credit card purchases
  • File a complaint with the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov
  • File with your state Attorney General — consumer protection division
  • Post detailed reviews on Google, BBB, and Trustpilot
  • File a BBB complaint — companies often respond to maintain their rating
  • Consider small claims court for larger amounts

Strategy 4: The Right Approach Matters

When requesting a refund from a resistant company:

  • Be polite but firm — aggression rarely works
  • Focus on facts, not emotions
  • Document everything in writing
  • Reference the specific problem, not just dissatisfaction
  • Propose a solution — full refund, partial refund, or store credit
  • Set a deadline for response

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Document the issue with the product or service
  • [ ] Check your state's consumer protection laws
  • [ ] Contact customer service and escalate to a supervisor
  • [ ] Reference specific legal protections
  • [ ] File a credit card chargeback if applicable
  • [ ] File complaints with the FTC and state AG
  • [ ] Consider small claims court for larger amounts

Bottom Line

A no-refunds policy is a company's preference, not an absolute rule. Consumer protection laws, credit card chargeback rights, and regulatory complaints give you real leverage. The key is knowing which tool to use and being persistent.

If you would rather not spend hours arguing with customer service, an AI assistant can handle the calls, reference the right legal frameworks, and escalate until the refund is secured.

Lisa Wei

Lisa Wei

Content Strategist

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