order not arrived.

I ordered and paid for a travel suit from a company in China,on the 15th of January 2020. Because of there spring holiday and there lockdown,they were unable to meet the eBay delivery date so they sent me a pair of socks,after several emails they told me that the suit had been sent and gave me a tracking number.It never arrived.after several emails they said they would supply me with another one it never arrived so I asked for a refund which I didn't get. I opened a case on eBay and was told to email the company which I did and didn't get a reply.there was nothing on the eBay site telling me what to do next.I thought that eBay would would take up my case when I didn't get a reply. But the closed the case, on contacting eBay and speaking to someone it was basically tough the case is closed. So I have not got my order and have lost nearly £100. I feel badly let down by eBay.

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I'm afraid this is your fault, not Ebay's. Unless you use the tools that Ebay provides, and use them properly, Ebay can't help you.

 

So you're not caught out in future, read the 30-day Money Back Guarantee (on every listing, and in various other places across the site). When you do, you'll see that you have 30 days from the last delivery estimate on the order in which to open an Ebay case that you can escalate. You can certainly open a case after those 30 days, but for communication with the seller only - there will be no option to ask Ebay to step.

 

Ebay also provides information in the following areas for you to refer to when things go wrong:

The Resolution Centre (link at foot of any page).

The More Actions dropdown beside each transaction on your Purchase History page.

The Help pages with their integral search (links at top and foot of any page).

 

Fortunately, you have 180 days from purchase date in which to open a case in PayPal. The type of case you should open is not clear. It would normally be for Item Not Received, but if the seller has tracking proving delivery (which they may have as they sent you a pair of socks, something which should have rung alarm bells immediately) you will lose the case. So you may need to open a Not As Described case if an opened INR case closes in the seller's favour. If that's what you have to do, that will involve you having to return the socks, with tracking and at your expense, before you can be refunded.

 

Make sure you follow the case instructions to the letter. And do not close it on a promise. Just as here, if you close it, or it auto-closes as a result of you not following instructions, that's it - you can't reopen it or open another.

 

@rosiehomer