By Caleb Rivera · April 17, 2026

Battle.net Charged My Old Card and I Got a Refund in an Hour.

Battle.net charged an expired card for a game. The charge somehow went through. They refunded quickly.

The lesson here is that most refund denials are not final. Companies have discretionary policies that allow exceptions, but they rarely advertise them. The key is knowing which policy to reference and how to frame your request.

If you are dealing with a similar situation with Battlenet Charged My, do not accept the first denial. Research their refund policy, find the specific clause that supports your case, and write a professional appeal referencing it. That single step can turn a “no” into a “yes.”

I use LaimRefund to do this research automatically. It searches the platform’s policies and relevant consumer laws, then drafts a professional appeal letter. Free to check your odds, only $3.99 to unlock the full letter.

More Refund Guides

The Perfect Ol Roy Refund Email Template [-roy]

After writing dozens of refund emails to Ol Roy I have found a formula that works almost every time....

Why CC'ing the BBB on Your Refund Email Works Even If You Never File a Complaint

The BBB does not actually receive emails sent to that address. Learn how to get your money back....

U-Haul Refused My Refund. Then I Quoted the Law.

When U-Haul denied my $1981 refund I read their entire policy and consumer laws...

Let AI + Human experience help.

Free to check your odds. Caleb did.

Check Your Case Free →