By Jackson Morris · March 19, 2026
The Nike Policy Loophole That Got Me $210 Back
When Nike denied my refund I did something unusual. I read their entire refund policy and terms of service. Took about an hour. And I found exactly two clauses that contradicted their denial. Here is how I used their own words to win $210 back.
Clause one said that customers could request a refund within 30 days for any reason. Their denial email said refunds were at their discretion. Those two things do not line up. I screenshotted the policy page with the URL visible and attached it to my reply.
Clause two referenced consumer rights in my state. Nike operates nationwide but their policy acknowledged that certain state laws provide additional protections. I looked up my state consumer protection statute and quoted it in my email. Nothing fancy.
The response came from their legal department instead of customer support. They offered the full $210 refund plus a $10 goodwill credit. The legal team knows when they are on shaky ground. Most companies write their policies broadly but do not actually want to test them in court.
This approach works for any company not just Nike. Their policies are written by lawyers and designed to give them maximum flexibility. But that same flexibility can work in your favor. If the policy says "may" or "at our discretion" you can argue why discretion should be exercised in your favor. If it says "must" or "will" you can demand compliance. Read the fine print. It is boring but profitable.
LaimRefund automates this whole process. It searches company policies and consumer laws in real time and writes a professional appeal that cites both. I built it because I got tired of spending hours reading terms of service. But the strategy works either way.
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