Parcel Delivered to Wrong Address? Your UK Refund Rights
A parcel delivered to the wrong address is not the same as a successful delivery to you. The courier may have scanned it as “delivered”, but the important question is whether the parcel reached your address, your authorised safe place, or a person you identified to receive it.
This guide explains what to do if the delivery photo shows the wrong door, the GPS location appears wrong, a neighbour has it, the parcel was left at the wrong building, or the retailer says the courier has already delivered it.
Wrong address delivery — what to do first
- Save the tracking page. Screenshot the delivery status, courier name, tracking number, date and time.
- Save the delivery photo. Check whether it shows your actual door, building, safe place, house number or street.
- Compare with your address. Take a photo of your own door, entrance, porch, safe place or building entrance for comparison.
- Check immediate neighbours only if safe. Do not trespass or put yourself at risk trying to recover the parcel.
- Contact the retailer in writing. Ask them to review the full delivery evidence instead of relying only on the tracking status.
Before contacting the retailer, use our missing parcel evidence checklist to save the right proof, including tracking screenshots, delivery photos, timestamps, safe-place notes and retailer messages.
Who is responsible if the parcel went to the wrong address?
If you bought from a retailer, your first complaint should usually be with the retailer, not the courier. The courier may hold the proof of delivery, but the retailer normally needs to investigate what happened with the courier.
Under section 29 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015, goods generally remain at the trader’s risk until they come into the physical possession of the consumer or someone identified by the consumer to receive them.
What counts as strong evidence of wrong-address delivery?
The best evidence shows that the courier delivered to a different location or cannot prove delivery to your address.
Useful evidence
- Delivery photo showing a different door or house number
- GPS/location data away from your address
- Neighbour says they received it by mistake
- Photo does not match your building entrance
- Tracking says safe place you did not choose
Weak retailer response
- “Courier says delivered” with no photo
- Generic doorstep photo with no number
- No GPS or location check
- No neighbour details
- Refusing to investigate because tracking says delivered
Common wrong-address delivery situations
| Situation | What to ask for |
|---|---|
| Photo shows wrong door | Ask the retailer to compare the courier photo with your address and request the full delivery record. |
| Delivered to neighbour by mistake | Ask for the neighbour details and confirm whether they were authorised to receive the parcel. |
| Delivered to wrong flat or building | Ask for the building entrance photo, signature/name, delivery note and location data. |
| GPS appears wrong | Ask the retailer to check the courier’s scan location against your delivery address. |
| Safe place at wrong address | Ask whether you authorised that safe place and whether it matches your property. |
Should you go to the wrong address yourself?
If the parcel appears to be at a nearby neighbour, it may be reasonable to ask politely. But you should not put yourself at risk, enter private property, argue with anyone, or rely only on a neighbour to fix the issue.
Even if you try to recover the parcel, keep the retailer informed. Your complaint should still be in writing, especially if the parcel is missing, damaged, opened, refused, or the person at the address denies having it.
What to say to the retailer
Keep your message factual. Do not make accusations unless you have clear evidence. Focus on the delivery evidence and the fact that the parcel was not delivered to your address.
- The courier delivery photo
- The exact delivery timestamp
- The GPS/location data where available
- The safe-place note or neighbour details
- The signature or name if available
- Whether the proof matches your delivery address
Simple message you can send
You can start with wording like this:
Subject: Parcel marked delivered to wrong address
Hello, my order is marked as delivered, but I have not received it. The delivery evidence appears to show that the parcel was delivered to the wrong address or does not clearly match my property.
Please review the full courier delivery record, including the delivery photo, timestamp, GPS/location data, safe-place note, neighbour details and any signature or name. Please confirm whether you can provide a refund, replacement, or clear proof that the parcel was delivered to my address or to someone I authorised.
This is only starter wording. If the retailer refuses, use a more formal written complaint with your evidence attached.
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Generate My Letter – £3.99If the retailer says the courier delivered it
A retailer may say the courier has confirmed delivery. That does not answer the key issue if the proof points to the wrong address. Ask the retailer to confirm what evidence proves the parcel reached your address or someone you authorised.
- If the photo is wrong: attach a photo of your actual door or entrance for comparison.
- If the GPS looks wrong: ask them to compare the scan location against your address.
- If it went to a neighbour: ask which neighbour and whether they were authorised.
- If it was left in a safe place: ask whether you selected that safe place before delivery.
If the retailer refuses: next steps
If the retailer refuses to help, keep your evidence and ask for a final response. Depending on how you paid, you may be able to escalate.
- Chargeback: Contact your bank as soon as possible. Chargeback claims often need to be raised within around 120 days of the transaction or expected delivery date.
- Section 75: If you paid by credit card and the item cost between £100 and £30,000, you may be able to claim from the credit card provider if the retailer breached the contract.
- Marketplace support: If you bought through eBay, Vinted, Depop, Amazon Marketplace or another marketplace, use their buyer protection route.
- Formal complaint: Keep all messages and ask for a final written response before escalating further.
This guide is general consumer information, not legal advice. For formal legal action, check official guidance or speak to a qualified adviser.
Related delivery problems
Wrong-address delivery often overlaps with other parcel problems:
Parcel delivered to wrong address FAQs
What should I do if my parcel was delivered to the wrong address?
Save the tracking page, delivery photo, timestamp, GPS or location evidence if available, and any message showing the parcel was delivered somewhere else. If you bought from a retailer, contact the retailer in writing and ask them to investigate with the courier.
Who is responsible if a courier delivered to the wrong address?
If you bought from a retailer, your first complaint should usually be with the retailer. The courier may hold the delivery evidence, but the retailer normally needs to investigate the courier issue.
Does a delivery photo prove delivery if it shows the wrong address?
Not necessarily. A delivery photo may not prove delivery to you if it shows a different door, house number, building entrance, porch, safe place, neighbour address or location you did not authorise.
Should I collect a parcel from the wrong address?
If the address is nearby and it is safe, you may choose to ask politely. But you should still keep the retailer informed and save evidence. Do not put yourself at risk or trespass to recover a parcel.
Can I use chargeback if a parcel was delivered to the wrong address?
If the retailer refuses to help, you may be able to ask your bank about chargeback or Section 75 depending on how you paid and the purchase value. Keep evidence that you tried to resolve the issue with the retailer first.