13-06-2025 4:38 PM
Hi everyone,
I’m reaching out for advice and support as I believe I’ve been the victim of a sophisticated return scam involving two separate eBay accounts.
Two buyers (suspected to be the same person using different accounts) purchased phones from me and later initiated return requests.
One claimed the seal was broken; the other claimed the phone didn’t work — both were brand new, factory-sealed, and recorded with serial numbers.
I was already suspicious due to:
Zero feedback on both accounts
Argos Click & Collect locations used for delivery — just 10 minutes apart
Pattern of behaviour across both transactions
Both buyers have now returned the items… or so it seems.
The tracking numbers show the items as “delivered” to me, but:
I was home all day for both deliveries
I have a Ring security camera — no delivery was made, no doorbell rang
Nothing was posted through the door or left outside
I believe the buyers used a fraudulent return method — possibly applying fake return labels to parcels, causing them to be scanned as delivered elsewhere (but falsely associated with my return address).
Raised this with eBay Support (still waiting for a resolution)
Contacted Royal Mail to request:
GPS delivery coordinates
Inbound scan photos when the parcels entered their network
If eBay processes refunds based on the delivery scan alone, I’ll be left nearly £1,800 out of pocket, with no returned items.
Has anyone experienced something similar?
Any advice on how to escalate this with eBay effectively?
How much weight does Royal Mail’s GPS data hold in disputes like this?
Would appreciate any help, guidance, or support from other sellers who’ve been through this.
Thanks in advance,
13-06-2025 5:07 PM
Which carrier was supposed to be returning the items; was it Royal Mail?
13-06-2025 5:17 PM - edited 13-06-2025 5:18 PM
Anyway...here's what you need to do in the exact order you need to do it:
For what it's worth expensive mobile devices are generally known as "scam magnets" on these boards. I would never dream of listing a mobile device worth more than £50 on my private account.
13-06-2025 5:29 PM
@francescalewis93 wrote:
What I’ve Done:
Raised this with eBay Support (still waiting for a resolution)
Contacted Royal Mail to request:
GPS delivery coordinates
Inbound scan photos when the parcels entered their network
My Concern:
If eBay processes refunds based on the delivery scan alone, I’ll be left nearly £1,800 out of pocket, with no returned items.
So it was Royal Mail.
The trouble with Royal Mail is the postman/postwoman; they just take the package to the door identified on the address label and obtain a delivery scan. All a thief needs to do is find an address served by the same delivery office as the seller's return address then manipulate the address on the return label. It is not sophisticated but it only happens with Royal Mail as the Postman/Postwoman is the weak link in the chain. The items that were actually returned were probably empty boxes that an unsuspecting neighbour has received.
The GPS coordinates of the delivery should be recorded on Royal Mail's website and - depending upon the service - a photo too. What is shown on Royal Mail's website?