Parcel Left in Safe Place But Missing? Your UK Refund Rights
Safe-place delivery disputes are common because a tracking update may say “delivered”, but the parcel may have been left in a porch, bin area, shed, communal hallway, behind a gate, by a doorstep, or somewhere else that you did not choose.
This guide explains what counts as an authorised safe place, what evidence to check, what to say to the retailer, and how to keep your complaint focused on the real issue: whether the parcel was delivered to you, your chosen location, or someone you authorised.
Safe-place parcel missing — what to do in 5 minutes
- Screenshot the tracking page showing the safe-place delivery status.
- Save the delivery photo, timestamp, courier note, and any GPS or location evidence shown.
- Check the exact safe place named in the tracking, plus nearby hidden spots.
- Ask household members, neighbours, building reception, concierge, post room, or workplace mail room if relevant.
- Email the retailer in writing and say whether you did or did not authorise that safe place.
Who is responsible if a safe-place parcel goes missing?
The responsibility usually depends on whether you authorised the safe place before delivery. If you clearly chose a safe place and the courier used it, the retailer may argue that the parcel was delivered according to your instruction. If the courier chose the safe place without your instruction, that is different.
If you bought from a retailer, the retailer should not simply say “the courier left it in a safe place” and close the complaint. They should check whether the safe place was actually authorised, whether the photo proves the parcel was left there, and whether the evidence links the delivery to your address.
| Situation | What it means |
|---|---|
| You selected the safe place before delivery | The retailer or courier may argue the parcel was delivered according to your instruction. |
| The courier chose the safe place without asking | You can challenge the delivery and ask the retailer to review the full evidence. |
| The photo does not show your address or safe place | The evidence may be too weak to prove the parcel reached your authorised location. |
| The parcel was left in a communal area | Ask how that proves delivery to you or to a place you authorised. |
What counts as an authorised safe place?
An authorised safe place is usually somewhere you clearly selected or instructed before delivery. That could be through the retailer checkout, courier app, delivery preferences, account settings, a written message, or a specific delivery instruction.
More likely authorised
- You selected the safe place in the courier app
- You added it during retailer checkout
- You left a written delivery instruction
- You named a specific neighbour or location
- The courier photo clearly shows that exact place
Weaker evidence
- Courier chose “porch” without your instruction
- Parcel was left beside bins or a communal door
- Photo does not show your address
- Safe place named is vague or wrong
- Tracking only says “left in safe place”
Tip: The argument is not just “the parcel is missing”. The stronger argument is: “I did not authorise this safe place, and the evidence does not show delivery to me or to a place I chose.”
Common safe places that cause disputes
Some safe places are secure and specific. Others are vague, exposed, communal, or easy for someone else to access. If the parcel is missing, describe exactly why the safe place was not appropriate or not authorised.
| Safe place | What to check |
|---|---|
| Porch or doorstep | Was it enclosed, private, and chosen by you — or just outside the door? |
| Wheelie bin or bin area | Did you authorise it, and could the parcel have been removed or collected with bins? |
| Shed, garage, or outbuilding | Was it accessible, named by you, and clearly shown in the photo? |
| Behind a gate or wall | Does the photo show it was your property and the correct location? |
| Communal hallway | Does this prove delivery to you, or was it accessible by other residents or visitors? |
| Reception, concierge, or post room | Can the handover be confirmed by staff, a name, a log, or a collection record? |
What evidence should you ask the retailer to check?
If the retailer only looks at the tracking headline, they may miss important details. Ask them to review the full delivery evidence rather than relying only on “left in safe place”.
- The delivery photo
- The exact safe-place note
- The delivery timestamp
- GPS or location data where available
- Whether you selected that safe place
- Neighbour or reception handover details
- Any signature, name, or collection evidence
What if the courier chose the safe place without asking?
If the courier picked a safe place without your permission, say that clearly in writing. Do not just say “it is missing”. Explain that you did not authorise the location, the parcel was not handed to you, and the retailer should review whether delivery was actually completed.
Use factual wording. For example, mention the tracking status, the safe-place note, why the location was not authorised, and why the photo or evidence does not prove the parcel reached you.
What if you did choose the safe place?
If you selected the safe place yourself, the complaint can be harder. You should still check whether the courier actually used the correct location, whether the photo matches that location, and whether the parcel was left in the way you instructed.
If the courier used a different place from the one you chose, or the photo does not show the location clearly, explain that to the retailer and ask them to review the evidence.
Buyer claim vs sender claim
The right complaint route depends on whether you bought the item or sent the parcel yourself.
| You are... | Your likely first step |
|---|---|
| The buyer | Contact the retailer or seller and ask for a refund, replacement, or proper delivery evidence. |
| The sender | Contact the courier you paid and raise a missing, misdelivered, or unsafe delivery claim. |
Courier-specific safe-place issues
Different couriers use different proof and wording. Use the guide that matches your tracking:
What your safe-place complaint should say
A weak message like “my parcel is missing” is easy to dismiss. A stronger letter should identify the order, challenge the safe-place evidence, and ask for a clear outcome.
- Your order number and tracking number
- The courier name and safe-place delivery status
- Whether you did or did not authorise that safe place
- Any problem with the photo, location, timestamp, or safe-place note
- A request for the retailer to check the full delivery evidence
- A direct request for a refund, replacement, or proper evidence of delivery
Generate a safe-place missing parcel letter in 2 minutes
Create a personalised letter that challenges weak safe-place evidence, asks for the full delivery record, and includes clear UK consumer-rights wording.
Generate My Letter – £3.99Your 14-day timeline
If the retailer does not resolve it, keep everything in writing and escalate in stages.
- Day 1: Send your first written complaint with tracking, safe-place evidence, and a clear request for refund or replacement.
- Day 3: Follow up in the same thread if there is no useful response.
- Day 7: Ask for a final response if they still rely only on the safe-place scan.
- Day 14: Consider escalating through your bank, credit card provider, marketplace support, Resolver, or a formal complaint route.
If the retailer refuses
Some retailers may say the courier has confirmed safe-place delivery. You can still ask them to show proper evidence that the parcel was left in a place you authorised and that the evidence links the delivery to your address.
- Chargeback: Contact your bank as soon as possible. Chargeback claims usually need to be started within around 120 days of the transaction or the date the goods were due to arrive.
- 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 has breached the contract.
- Marketplace support: If you bought through a marketplace, use their buyer protection or dispute route.
- Formal complaint: Ask the retailer for a final response and keep a full paper trail.
This guide is general consumer information, not legal advice. For formal legal action, check official guidance or speak to a qualified adviser.
What to include in your email
Do not just say “it was left in a safe place and disappeared”. Explain why the safe-place evidence is not enough.
Your email should include:
- Your order number
- The courier tracking number
- The safe-place status shown in tracking
- Whether you authorised that location
- Any issue with the photo, timestamp, or location data
- What you checked: safe place, neighbours, household, reception, post room, or building staff
- A request for the retailer to review the full delivery evidence
- A clear request for a refund, replacement, or proper proof of delivery
Our letter generator includes wording that prompts the retailer to check the safe-place delivery evidence properly, rather than relying only on the tracking status.
Ready to send your safe-place complaint?
£3.99 upfront — no signup, no subscription. Create a personalised missing parcel letter with safe-place wording and a clear evidence checklist.
Create My Letter – £3.99Parcel left in safe place but missing FAQs
Who is responsible if a parcel was left in a safe place and went missing?
If you bought from a retailer and did not authorise that safe place, contact the retailer first and ask them to review the full delivery evidence. If you clearly instructed that safe place, responsibility may be different.
What counts as an authorised safe place?
An authorised safe place is usually somewhere you clearly selected or instructed before delivery, such as through the retailer checkout, courier app, delivery preferences, or written delivery instructions.
What if the courier chose the safe place without asking me?
Tell the retailer in writing that you did not authorise that location and ask them to review the full delivery evidence, including the photo, timestamp, safe-place note, and location data where available.
Is a photo of a parcel in a safe place enough proof?
Not always. A photo may help, but it may not prove delivery if it does not clearly show your address, the authorised safe place, or that the parcel reached somewhere you chose.
Should I contact the courier or the retailer?
If you bought from a retailer, contact the retailer first. The courier may hold delivery evidence, but the retailer usually needs to investigate the courier issue.
Can I use chargeback if the retailer refuses?
If the retailer refuses to help, you may be able to use chargeback through your bank. Contact your bank as soon as possible and provide your order, tracking evidence, delivery photo, and correspondence.