P
Penny Foolish
Guest
I bought a mobile phone from Xtravision back in June and the €100 charge appeared on my June statement. However, they charged me again for it in October. I rang Xtravision and they refused to sort it out for me. Some points I picked out from the conversation though:
- they had some "glitch" in their computer system
- about 15,000 transactions were affected
- these 15,000 transactions all went through on the one day sometime at the beginning of October
So if you've bought anything from them over the last few months, check your statements folks, and if you've been affected don't expect much help from Xtravision, I'm still in dispute with them over this.
On the same subject of checking credit card paperwork, I spent €60 in a small shop (also in October). Normally I check the amount as I sign the credit card slip, but the assistant said "60 euros" as she handed the slip to me, so this time I didn't bother. It was only when I got home that I realised the till receipt had €60, but the credit card receipt had €90. Up till then I hadn't realised that some shops have to manually type the amounts in twice, making this quite an easy mistake to make. Happily they refunded the €30 straight away.
My eagle eyes saved me €130 in just one month, but it left me wondering if I had ever missed any other mistakes like this. My usual routine of checking for any odd transactions on my statement wouldn't have picked these errors up
- they had some "glitch" in their computer system
- about 15,000 transactions were affected
- these 15,000 transactions all went through on the one day sometime at the beginning of October
So if you've bought anything from them over the last few months, check your statements folks, and if you've been affected don't expect much help from Xtravision, I'm still in dispute with them over this.
On the same subject of checking credit card paperwork, I spent €60 in a small shop (also in October). Normally I check the amount as I sign the credit card slip, but the assistant said "60 euros" as she handed the slip to me, so this time I didn't bother. It was only when I got home that I realised the till receipt had €60, but the credit card receipt had €90. Up till then I hadn't realised that some shops have to manually type the amounts in twice, making this quite an easy mistake to make. Happily they refunded the €30 straight away.
My eagle eyes saved me €130 in just one month, but it left me wondering if I had ever missed any other mistakes like this. My usual routine of checking for any odd transactions on my statement wouldn't have picked these errors up