Retailer Says GPS Confirms Delivery? What to Do in the UK
Retailers and couriers sometimes refuse missing parcel complaints by saying the courier GPS confirms delivery. This can sound final, but GPS evidence can still be unclear, incomplete or too broad to prove the parcel reached you.
This guide explains what to ask for, what weak GPS evidence looks like, and how to challenge a retailer that relies on GPS without dealing with your missing parcel properly.
What does “GPS confirms delivery” usually mean?
It usually means the courier device recorded a location near the delivery address at the time the parcel was scanned as delivered. But that does not automatically prove the parcel was given to you or left in a safe, authorised place.
| Retailer says | What to ask |
|---|---|
| GPS shows the driver was nearby | Does it show the exact address, flat, building entrance or only the general area? |
| The courier marked it delivered | What photo, signature, safe-place note or handover evidence supports that? |
| GPS matches your postcode | Does it match your door, building, flat, neighbour or another nearby property? |
| The case is closed | Can they provide the evidence and explain why it proves delivery to you? |
Why GPS evidence can be weak
GPS can be useful, but it can also be imprecise. In flats, terraces, shared buildings, new-build estates, rural areas and streets with similar addresses, location data can point near the correct place without proving the parcel was actually delivered correctly.
Stronger evidence
- Clear delivery photo at your door
- Signature or handover evidence
- Named neighbour or reception detail
- Authorised safe-place evidence
- Timestamp matching delivery route
- GPS matching your exact property
- Courier notes explaining the delivery
Weaker evidence
- GPS only near your street
- GPS only matching your postcode
- No delivery photo
- Photo of wrong door or shared hallway
- No proof you authorised a safe place
- No neighbour name or flat number
- Only a “delivered” scan
Evidence you should save
Save your own evidence before replying. This helps you explain why GPS alone is not enough.
- order confirmation;
- delivery address shown on the order;
- tracking screenshot;
- delivery photo, if any;
- delivery timestamp;
- photos of your door, flat entrance or building entrance if relevant;
- screenshots showing no parcel was received;
- messages with neighbours, reception or building management;
- retailer/courier chat or email records.
What to ask the retailer for
Do not just accept “GPS confirms delivery” as a complete answer. Ask them to explain what the GPS actually shows and how it proves delivery to you.
Ask for:
- the GPS/location data relied on;
- delivery photo;
- courier notes;
- delivery timestamp;
- safe-place instruction used;
- neighbour or reception details;
- signature or handover proof;
- an explanation of why the GPS proves delivery to your address.
Simple wording to challenge GPS delivery proof
You can start with short wording like this:
Subject: Missing parcel — request for full GPS delivery evidence
Hello, I understand you are relying on courier GPS/location data to say this parcel was delivered. I have not received the parcel.
Please provide the full delivery evidence you are relying on, including the GPS/location data, delivery photo, delivery timestamp, courier notes, safe-place instruction, neighbour or reception details, and any signature or handover evidence.
Please also explain whether the GPS data shows my exact address/door/building entrance, or only the general delivery area.
If the parcel cannot be shown as delivered to me, my address, an authorised safe place or an authorised recipient, please confirm whether you will provide a refund, replacement or redelivery.
This is starter wording only. If the retailer refuses, a stronger tailored letter should challenge the exact evidence they are relying on.
Need a stronger GPS delivery dispute letter?
Generate a personalised UK refund letter for a missing parcel where the retailer relies on GPS, tracking, delivery photo or weak proof of delivery.
Create My Refund Letter – £2.99What if the GPS points to the wrong place?
If the GPS or delivery photo points to another house, block, flat, street, neighbour, communal hallway or old address, say that clearly and attach evidence.
Use these related guides depending on the issue:
- Delivery photo is not my house
- Parcel delivered to wrong flat
- Parcel delivered to wrong address
- Parcel delivered to old address
- Parcel stolen from communal hallway
If the retailer refuses
If the retailer refuses because of GPS, ask for the final decision in writing and challenge the exact evidence.
- If there is no photo: ask how GPS alone proves delivery to you.
- If the photo is wrong: explain why it does not show your address.
- If it was left in a shared area: ask why that was treated as secure or authorised.
- If GPS only shows the street: ask what proves it reached your door or authorised recipient.
- If they say contact the courier: use our retailer says contact the courier guide.
Related guides
GPS delivery proof FAQs
What should I do if the retailer says GPS confirms delivery?
Ask for the full GPS/location evidence, delivery photo, timestamp, courier notes, safe-place instruction and any neighbour, reception, signature or handover evidence.
Does GPS prove the parcel was delivered to me?
Not always. GPS may show the courier was nearby, but it may not prove the parcel reached you, your exact door, an authorised safe place or an authorised recipient.
Can I challenge courier GPS proof?
Yes. Ask what the GPS actually shows, whether it matches your precise address, and what other evidence supports the delivery scan.
What if the retailer refuses because of GPS?
Ask for the refusal in writing and challenge the specific evidence. Explain why the GPS does not prove delivery to you, your address, an authorised safe place or an authorised recipient.