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How to Fight an E-Commerce Price Hike After Your Order Was Canceled

A company canceled your order then relisted the product at a higher price? Learn how to fight back and protect your consumer rights.

Last edited on May 26, 2026
3 min read

You placed an order at an advertised price. The company confirmed it. Then days later, they canceled your order without explanation — and relisted the same product at a higher price. This bait-and-switch tactic is more common in e-commerce than you might think.

Is This Legal?

In most cases, a confirmed order creates a binding contract. Companies canceling orders to relist at higher prices may violate:

  • State consumer protection laws against deceptive practices
  • FTC regulations on bait-and-switch advertising
  • State AG guidelines on pricing practices
  • Credit card merchant agreements on honoring confirmed transactions

However, most companies include terms of service that allow order cancellation — making legal action complex.

Step 1: Document the Bait and Switch

Gather evidence:

  • Original order confirmation with the price
  • Cancellation notice from the company
  • Current listing showing the higher price
  • Screenshots of any advertising at the original price
  • Timeline showing the sequence of events

Step 2: Contact the Company

Before escalating:

  1. Demand they honor the original order at the confirmed price
  2. Reference your order confirmation as evidence of a completed transaction
  3. Ask for a written explanation of the cancellation
  4. Set a deadline for response (7 business days)
  5. Escalate to a manager if the first response is unsatisfactory

Step 3: Escalate to Authorities

If the company refuses to honor the price:

  • File with the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov
  • File with your state AG — consumer protection division
  • File a BBB complaint
  • Leave reviews on Google, Trustpilot, and social media
  • Consider small claims court if the amount justifies it
  • File a credit card dispute if you were charged and then refunded at a different amount

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Save the original order confirmation and price
  • [ ] Screenshot the cancellation notice and current higher price
  • [ ] Contact the company and demand they honor the original price
  • [ ] File complaints with the FTC and state AG
  • [ ] Leave detailed reviews documenting the practice
  • [ ] Consider small claims court for significant amounts

Bottom Line

Order cancellations followed by price increases are a form of bait-and-switch that consumer protection laws are designed to prevent. Document everything, demand the original price, and escalate to regulators if the company refuses.

If dealing with a company that already showed bad faith is not appealing, an AI assistant can handle the dispute — contacting the company, filing complaints, and pursuing the resolution on your behalf.

Lisa Wei

Lisa Wei

Content Strategist

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