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Mobile broadband - Insufficient compensation

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If you have had a dispute with your service provider, and feel that they have offered insufficient compensation, you should contact their customer services department via Resolver.

Explain why you believe the compensation offered is insufficient.

Include a summary of the issue for which you are being paid compensation, an account of the compensation you have been offered (it may be easiest to enclose a copy of the communication which offered you compensation), and a statement setting out why the compensation you have been offered is inadequate.

You should know
  • If you are unhappy with your service provider’s initial response, you should contact their customer services department via Resolver. Give clear details of your case such as what happened, when, and why you are complaining.
  • The company should acknowledge your case with 14 days.
  • If the company doesn't respond to your issue, then you should escalate your case to the next level. Resolver will remind you when the time comes!
  • Your case is officially registered with the company as soon as the email is delivered and so you can escalate your case to an ombudsman after 8 weeks.

The Consumer Rights Act

Your rights mainly come from the Consumer Rights Act. The Consumer Rights Act sets out what you should expect from goods or services, giving you specific rights when things go wrong.

Taking things further

If the matter isn't resolved after eight weeks or if you receive a deadlock letter, you can send your case to the ombudsman. There are two ombudsmen in the telecoms market - CISAS or Ombudsman Services. Resolver knows which one to send your case to. We'll package up your communications and all supporting documentation and send it all to the relevant ombudsman.

The ombudsman will then undertake an independent investigation of your case for free. You can still take your telephone provider to court if you don't agree with the outcome, but only use this as a last resort. You should always seek legal advice before taking a matter to court.

If you need additional assistance

If you need additional advice and guidance on the issue you can contact your local Citizens Advice.

Find the best rights for you

We have 5,115 pages of rights advice for you covering 10,930 companies and organisations across 16 public & private sectors. Feel free to browse companies for this specific issue - they're all listed below - but the quickest way to find the best rights for you is by using our unique Rights Finder to access our extensive database of advice.

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Helping you with Insufficient compensation

Resolver covers the issue Insufficient Compensation for 7 companies and organisations: