Keep in mind PayPal's policy of time limits for opening disputes:
A buyer has 45 days after the date of the payment to open a dispute.
A dispute can be escalated to a claim within 20 days from when the dispute was filed.
Buyers must wait at least 7 days from the date of payment to escalate a dispute for an item not received, unless the dispute is for $2,500 USD or the equivalent or more.
If the dispute is not escalated to a claim within 20 days, we'll close the dispute. A closed dispute cannot be reopened or escalated to a PayPal claim.
When the 20-day deadline is approaching, we will remind you by email and in the "Resolution Center."
So the key date is 45 days from when the buyer paid you with PayPal. Some international shipments, especially if 1st Class Mail, can take longer than 45 days. If your buyer starts complaining at, say, a month - try to keep him happy and tell him you are researching matters. If he asks you to send another item, tell him you are trying to obtain one for him.
What you want to avoid is a claim when you have already shipped the item. The buyer can end up with your money AND your product if you are not careful.
Paypal disputes process changing for Ebay sellers? - Free EBAY, PayPal, Business and Law Forums - Ebay Suspension, PayPal Limited
Once the 45 day period passes, there can be no further dispute or claim, at least not through PayPal. (The buyer can still try a credit card chargeback for up to 60 days past the day when he received his credit card statement, but PayPal frowns on chargebacks and might close his PayPal account if he tries something like that.)
(And of course - if a buyer initiates a dispute and does NOT escalate to a claim right away, keeping him happy for 20 days will shut him out of the ability to do anything to you either.)
Also - keep in mind the 60 day feedback rule - the clock starts ticking from the day the auction closed. If you can keep the buyer happy for at least those 60 days, you will be home free from any negative feedback repercussions.
You can use this
Date Calculator: Find Your Date
to calculate the exact day.
BUT - keep in mind- for some odd reason EBAY tends to give the buyers up to one additional day to leave feedback. So, 61 days might be the more correct rule for feedback cut off.
A buyer has 45 days after the date of the payment to open a dispute.
A dispute can be escalated to a claim within 20 days from when the dispute was filed.
Buyers must wait at least 7 days from the date of payment to escalate a dispute for an item not received, unless the dispute is for $2,500 USD or the equivalent or more.
If the dispute is not escalated to a claim within 20 days, we'll close the dispute. A closed dispute cannot be reopened or escalated to a PayPal claim.
When the 20-day deadline is approaching, we will remind you by email and in the "Resolution Center."
So the key date is 45 days from when the buyer paid you with PayPal. Some international shipments, especially if 1st Class Mail, can take longer than 45 days. If your buyer starts complaining at, say, a month - try to keep him happy and tell him you are researching matters. If he asks you to send another item, tell him you are trying to obtain one for him.
What you want to avoid is a claim when you have already shipped the item. The buyer can end up with your money AND your product if you are not careful.
Paypal disputes process changing for Ebay sellers? - Free EBAY, PayPal, Business and Law Forums - Ebay Suspension, PayPal Limited
Once the 45 day period passes, there can be no further dispute or claim, at least not through PayPal. (The buyer can still try a credit card chargeback for up to 60 days past the day when he received his credit card statement, but PayPal frowns on chargebacks and might close his PayPal account if he tries something like that.)
(And of course - if a buyer initiates a dispute and does NOT escalate to a claim right away, keeping him happy for 20 days will shut him out of the ability to do anything to you either.)
Also - keep in mind the 60 day feedback rule - the clock starts ticking from the day the auction closed. If you can keep the buyer happy for at least those 60 days, you will be home free from any negative feedback repercussions.
You can use this
Date Calculator: Find Your Date
to calculate the exact day.
BUT - keep in mind- for some odd reason EBAY tends to give the buyers up to one additional day to leave feedback. So, 61 days might be the more correct rule for feedback cut off.
Comment