Getting your money back in the US.
12 guides for reclaiming what you are owed in the US, each grounded in the local consumer-rights rules. Read yours, then let the AI write the claim. Free, and you keep all of it.
Write a claim for the USShopping
- Get a Refund for an Undelivered Online Order in the USPaid for something online that never arrived? The FTC's Mail, Internet, or Telephone Order Rule entitles you to shipment on time or a prompt refund. Here's how to claim it.
- Refund Junk Fees and Hidden ChargesGet back surprise resort fees, hidden service charges, and other junk fees that were not disclosed in the advertised price.
Subscriptions
- Cancel a Gym Membership and Stop Charges in the USGym still billing you after you tried to quit? Use state health-club cancellation laws and card or ACH disputes to cancel cleanly and stop recurring charges.
- How to Get a Subscription Refund After a Free Trial in the USGot charged when a free trial auto-renewed? Here is how to claw the money back from the company or your card issuer, using ROSCA, the FTC Act, and state auto-renewal laws.
Travel
- Airline Refund for a Cancelled Flight in the US (DOT)Airline cancelled your flight and you don't want to rebook? US DOT rules entitle you to a cash refund to your original payment method, not just a voucher. Here's how to get it.
- How to Reclaim a Hotel Resort Fee in the USHit with a surprise resort fee that wasn't in the advertised price? Here is how to get it back using the FTC Junk Fees Rule and state pricing laws, keeping every cent.
Banking
- Reclaim Bank NSF and Overdraft FeesGet back non-sufficient funds (NSF) and overdraft fees, including surprise overdraft and multiple-fee charges your bank may have wrongly assessed.
- How to Dispute a Bank Overdraft Fee in the USCharged an overdraft fee you think is wrong? Here is how to push back using Regulation E, the CFPB, and a plain refund request, and keep every dollar yourself.
- How to Dispute a Duplicate Charge in the USCharged twice for the same thing? Here is how to get the duplicate reversed using the Fair Credit Billing Act and your card issuer's dispute process, keeping all of it.