By Megan Clark · February 19, 2026
eBay Said No to My Refund. I Sent This One Email and Got $464.
So eBay owed me $464. At first they said no. Standard script: policy this, terms that. I have been down this road before so I did not take no for an answer. Here is exactly what I did and the exact words that got my money back.
The first email I sent was simple and polite. No threats. No drama. Just the facts: my order number, what went wrong, what I wanted. eBay's first response was the usual copy-paste denial. I expected that. The trick is what you do next.
I replied with three things: a screenshot of their own policy page that contradicted their denial, a screenshot of the problem, and a short paragraph about why their policy applied to my case. No anger. Just evidence. That simple shift in tone changed everything.
The second response came from a supervisor. They offered a partial refund. I did not take it. I politely explained why I was entitled to the full $464 and gave them 7 days to make it right. They caved on day 6.
Look, eBay processes thousands of requests a day. The agents are not your enemy. They are just following scripts. Your job is to make it EASIER for them to say yes than to say no. Attach evidence upfront. Reference specific policy language. Be the one clear professional voice in their inbox. That is literally all it takes.
I used LaimRefund to help structure my email. It searches relevant policies and consumer laws automatically and drafts a professional appeal. Honestly saved me hours of research. But the core lesson is the same whether you use a tool or do it manually: be polite, be prepared, be persistent.
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