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USPS Damaged Item

So i sold a figurine before the holidays and it sat in a warehouse for a couple weeks because of the pandemic. The buyer messaged me with a picture and the item was broken. It was sent first class the total item with shipping was $22.00.

 

I am curious to know if i should just take the loss and refund her. Or file a claim? Is it even worth it?

Message 1 of 7
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USPS Damaged Item

EDIT*** Obviously file a claim with USPS not the buyer lol. Wanted to make that straight.

Message 2 of 7
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USPS Damaged Item

Unless you paid for insurance OR shipped Priority there is no filing a claim.

Also USPS has been for the last few months not paying claims unless the item and packaging are returned to them and show obvious damage. 

 

As a seller your choices are to refund the buyer or have the buyer file a claim as "not as described" and return the item and you refund once you receive it.

klhmdg  •  Volunteer Community Mentor
Message 3 of 7
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USPS Damaged Item

What are you going to lose by filing a claim?  That is, if it had insurance.

 

Five minutes of time and refund are worth it to me.  And I insure a lot more packages these days.

Good Moms let you lick the Beaters.

Great Moms turn them off first.
Message 4 of 7
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USPS Damaged Item

1.  Yes refund your buyer (full amount they paid)

2.  If you shipped first  class I assume you shipped it in a padded envelope.  A  priority box would have offered more protection for a fragile item such as a figurine plus up to $50 insurance protection for you.

3.  The seller is fully responsible for getting an item delivered to the buyer in the condition it was advertised in their listing.

 

"I have the right to remain silent but I didn't have the ability." Ron White, Fritch, Texas
"Stay away from negative people, they have a problem for every solution." A. Einstein
"The Devil made me do it!" - Flip Wilson
"If the band can only play loud - they ain't no good - peps too!" J.R. Johnson
Message 5 of 7
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USPS Damaged Item

@bostonbrian29 

I'd also take this experience as an opportunity to review  your packaging methods.  Are there places where you could change or adjust?

 

Me?  I don't ship anything breakable until I test the packaging.  So I take an old glass jar out of the recycle bin, package it as I propose to pack the item I am shipping and then kick that package off the top of the stairs to the basement floor (concrete).  Then if I open the package and the jar survived then that was a good packing method. 

 

Remember, packages travel on conveyors and could take a tumble on to the shop floor or could fall off the back of a truck, etc.  So while the "test" I do seems extreme, it has worked for me.  That often means double or triple walled boxes with the grain of alternate layers 90-degrees, minimum of 2-in of padding on all sides, or even a box inside a box.

 

So just some thoughts!  Hope it helps!

Message 6 of 7
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USPS Damaged Item

One of the Hummel figurines? Did you double-box it?

Message 7 of 7
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