Parcelforce Lost or Damaged Parcel? How to Claim Compensation
Parcelforce Worldwide handles UK and international parcels for consumers, retailers, and business senders. It sits inside the Royal Mail Group but has its own claim process. UK domestic claims must be notified within 30 days of despatch. Standard cover is £150, with enhanced cover up to £2,500 if the sender bought it at booking. Miss the window and Parcelforce will usually refuse.
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Quick answer
- If your Parcelforce parcel is marked delivered but not received, or lost in transit:
- Contact the retailer first, not Parcelforce.
- Under the Consumer Rights Act 2015, the seller is legally responsible until the goods reach you.
- You may be entitled to a full refund or replacement.
Parcelforce complaint steps at a glance
- 1Check the Parcelforce tracking page for scans, depot notes, delivery attempts, signatures, and any delivery photo or location details.
- 2Contact Parcelforce through their help and claims routes with your tracking number, proof of value, and photos if the item is damaged.
- 3If a retailer arranged the delivery, contact the retailer for a refund or replacement. Under UK consumer law, the retailer is responsible for safe delivery to you.
- 4Keep all evidence and correspondence. If the retailer will not help, consider escalating through your bank, card provider, or Citizens Advice.
Parcelforce compensation at a glance
| Type | Limit / Timescale |
|---|---|
| Lost or damaged parcel (standard) | Up to £150 inclusive compensation |
| Enhanced compensation cover | Up to £2,500 per consignment (if purchased) |
| Who claims? | Sender usually files the claim |
| Loss claim deadline (UK domestic) | Within 30 days of despatch |
| Loss / damage / delay claim deadline (UK domestic) | Within 30 days of despatch |
International deadlines differ by service. Verify current terms before claiming.
Parcelforce claim route at a glance
| Question | Practical answer |
|---|---|
| Who should a shopper contact first? | The retailer, because the seller usually owns the delivery obligation. |
| Who usually opens the carrier claim? | The sender or contract holder, often the retailer for online orders. |
| What evidence matters most? | Tracking, delivery photo or signature, proof of value, packaging photos for damage, and written retailer replies. |
| When should you escalate? | After a refusal, weak proof of delivery, or repeated delay without a clear refund or replacement decision. |
Specific Parcelforce problem guides
Your legal rights
Under the Consumer Rights Act 2015, a retailer remains responsible for goods until they are delivered to you. If Parcelforce loses or damages a retailer order, your refund or replacement claim is usually against the retailer, even if Parcelforce also investigates.
What compensation can you get from Parcelforce?
Parcelforce UK domestic services include up to £150 inclusive compensation as standard under current terms. Enhanced compensation cover, purchased by the sender at booking, raises the ceiling to up to £2,500 per consignment. International services carry different caps and exclusions. These limits sit in Parcelforce's current terms and are updated periodically, so verify the cap for the specific service used before quoting a figure in a complaint. As the recipient you usually cannot claim from Parcelforce directly, the delivery contract is between Parcelforce and the sender. For retailer orders, your real route is the Consumer Rights Act 2015, which makes the retailer responsible until the goods reach you regardless of the courier's cap.
Parcelforce claim deadlines, don't miss them
Parcelforce's published claim windows are short and strict. For UK domestic services, loss, damage and delay claims must be made within 30 days of despatch. International services differ: 15 days for globalexpress, 30 days for irelandexpress and globalpriority, and 120 days for globalvalue and BFPO Worldwide. Miss the window and Parcelforce will usually refuse the claim, leaving only the consumer-law route against the retailer. Act fast: screenshot the tracking page as soon as a suspect scan appears, photograph damaged packaging and contents before unpacking, and email the retailer on the same day. If the parcel was a gift, only the sender or buyer can open the Parcelforce claim, so flag it to them immediately.
How to file a Parcelforce complaint
First, gather evidence: Parcelforce tracking number, proof of posting if you were the sender, order confirmation and invoice for proof of value, and photos of damaged packaging or the contents. Second, if a retailer arranged the delivery, email them citing the Consumer Rights Act 2015 and request a refund or replacement, written records matter if you escalate later. Third, if you booked the delivery yourself, open a claim through the Parcelforce website with your evidence attached. Fourth, if either party stalls, escalate through your card issuer: chargeback for debit-card purchases, or a Section 75 claim for credit-card purchases over £100.
What if Parcelforce rejects your claim?
Rejections typically come down to a missed deadline, missing proof of value or posting, or Parcelforce treating a scan and address record as conclusive proof of delivery. A Parcelforce rejection does not end your case for retailer orders. Under the Consumer Rights Act 2015, the retailer remains responsible until the goods reach you: Section 29 puts the risk on the seller, not the courier. Write to the retailer citing Section 29 and request a full refund. If they refuse, open a chargeback with your bank, a Section 75 claim for credit-card purchases over £100, or escalate to an ADR scheme as a last resort.
Frequently asked questions
How do I report a lost Parcelforce parcel?
Check the Parcelforce tracking page first for scans and delivery attempts. Then contact Parcelforce with the tracking number, proof of posting, proof of value, and sender and recipient details. If a retailer arranged the delivery, ask them to open the claim, for online orders the retailer is responsible for delivery under the Consumer Rights Act 2015.
Parcelforce says delivered but I do not have it, what should I do?
Ask Parcelforce for delivery evidence: the scan, signature, driver photo, or address details. Check with neighbours and any agreed safe place. If the evidence does not prove delivery to you, contact the retailer and request a refund or replacement under the Consumer Rights Act 2015, they, not Parcelforce, carry the risk until the goods reach you.
Can I claim from Parcelforce directly as the recipient?
No. The formal Parcelforce compensation claim is filed by the sender. For retailer orders that means the retailer opens the claim. Pursue the retailer first under the Consumer Rights Act 2015, which makes them responsible for safe delivery and does not depend on whether Parcelforce accepts fault.
How long do I have to claim from Parcelforce?
Parcelforce's published windows for UK domestic services are short: 30 days from despatch for loss, damage and delay claims. Deadlines differ for some international services (15 days for globalexpress, 30 days for irelandexpress and globalpriority, 120 days for globalvalue and BFPO Worldwide). Miss the window and Parcelforce will usually refuse. The retailer's Consumer Rights Act 2015 liability runs separately, but act fast on both routes.
How much compensation does Parcelforce pay?
UK domestic Parcelforce services include up to £150 inclusive compensation as standard. The sender can purchase enhanced compensation cover at booking up to £2,500 per consignment. International services carry different caps and exclusions. Check the current Parcelforce terms for the service used before quoting a figure in a complaint.
In-depth Parcelforce guides
- parcel marked delivered but not received, What to do when tracking says delivered but you have nothing
- retailer says contact courier, What to do when a retailer redirects you to the courier
- Consumer Rights Act 2015 delivery rights, Your rights when a UK delivery goes wrong
- what to do if refund refused, Escalate a refused Parcelforce refund
Sources checked
- Parcelforce making a claim
- Parcelforce conditions of carriage
- Consumer Rights Act 2015, Section 29
- Citizens Advice consumer service
Carrier terms change. The table above is a guide to current public terms, not a substitute for checking the carrier's live policy before filing.
Common Parcelforce delivery problems
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