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    DPD Late Delivery: How to Get a Refund (UK)

    If your parcel is well past its expected delivery date with a DPD delivery, you have rights as a UK consumer. Under the Consumer Rights Act 2015 and Consumer Contracts Regulations, retailers must deliver within the agreed period or within 30 days. If a delivery date was essential and missed, you can cancel and request a full refund. DPD's contract is with the sender. Buyers should claim from the retailer; retailers can recover from DPD. Use this page to check what to do next, the DPD claim window, and when to escalate if the retailer refuses. Compensation figures vary by service, so always verify the current numbers on DPD's website before relying on them.

    Compensation figures vary by service and change over time. Always verify the current numbers and deadlines on DPD's own website before relying on them. This is general information, not legal advice.

    How to claim a refund

    1. 1

      Confirm the agreed delivery window from your order confirmation. Note the date the courier handover happened in DPD tracking.

    2. 2

      Check DPD's tracking for any depot or hub holds. Many "late" parcels are stuck at a sortation hub.

    3. 3

      Contact the retailer in writing. Reference Consumer Contracts Regulations: delivery must happen within the agreed period or within 30 days.

    4. 4

      If the date was essential (named day, gift, event), state this clearly and ask to cancel for a full refund.

    5. 5

      If the delivery is just slow, ask the retailer to chase DPD via the DPD claim portal (the sender usually files; ask the retailer to lodge it). The window is 14 days from despatch for loss and damage (verify on the DPD website).

    6. 6

      If the retailer refuses to refund or replace after the 30-day backstop, escalate via the Postal Redress Service (POSTRS) once a deadlock is reached or use Section 75 / chargeback.

    DPD compensation and escalation

    Claim window
    14 days from despatch for loss and damage (verify on the DPD website)
    How to claim
    the DPD claim portal (the sender usually files; ask the retailer to lodge it)
    Escalation
    the Postal Redress Service (POSTRS) once a deadlock is reached

    See full DPD compensation table

    Frequently asked questions

    Should I claim from DPD or the retailer?

    Claim from the retailer. DPD's contract is with the sender. Buyers should claim from the retailer; retailers can recover from DPD. Asking DPD directly will usually fail because your contract is with the retailer.

    What is DPD's claim window for this issue?

    14 days from despatch for loss and damage (verify on the DPD website). Always check the current terms on DPD's own website before relying on a deadline.

    What if the retailer refuses to refund?

    If your order was over £100 and paid by credit card, file a Section 75 claim with your card issuer. For debit card or smaller amounts, request a chargeback within 120 days. You can also escalate via the Postal Redress Service (POSTRS) once a deadlock is reached.

    When is a delivery legally late?

    If a specific delivery window was agreed, it is late after that window. If no window was agreed, the statutory backstop is 30 days from the order date under the Consumer Contracts Regulations.

    Can I cancel and get a full refund for a late DPD delivery?

    Yes if the delivery date was essential and you made that clear, or if the retailer misses the agreed window or 30-day backstop and refuses a reasonable second deadline.

    Other DPD delivery problems

    Same problem, different carrier

    Related guides

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