Tracking Says Delivered But No Proof? What to Do in the UK
A parcel tracking page can say “delivered” even when you have not received the parcel. Sometimes there is no delivery photo, no signature, no neighbour name, no safe-place note and no clear evidence showing where the parcel was left.
This guide explains what to ask for, what evidence matters, and how to challenge a retailer or courier when tracking says delivered but there is no proper proof.
Tracking says delivered but there is no proof — what does that mean?
A delivered scan is not always the full story. It may only mean the courier marked the parcel as delivered in their system. It does not automatically prove that the parcel reached your address, your chosen safe place, or someone you authorised to receive it.
The stronger the delivery proof, the harder it is to challenge. The weaker the proof, the more reasonable it is to ask for a proper investigation.
Stronger delivery evidence
- Clear photo of your actual door or safe place
- Correct address-linked delivery details
- Clear timestamp and tracking history
- Named neighbour or reception handover
- Signature or passcode where relevant
- GPS or location evidence matching your property
Weak delivery evidence
- Only a “delivered” tracking scan
- No photo, signature or safe-place note
- Photo of an unknown door or hallway
- No neighbour name or address
- No GPS or location evidence
- Contradictory tracking updates
What to ask the retailer for
If the retailer says tracking proves delivery, ask for the underlying evidence. Keep the request clear and specific.
- the delivery photo, if one exists;
- the delivery timestamp;
- the full tracking history;
- the courier name and tracking number;
- the delivery address used by the courier;
- safe-place instructions or notes;
- neighbour, concierge or reception handover details;
- signature, passcode or handover evidence if used;
- GPS or location evidence if available to the courier.
If there is no photo at all, use our related guide: parcel says delivered but no photo.
Should you contact the retailer or the courier?
If you bought from a retailer, your first complaint should usually go to the retailer. The courier may hold useful delivery information, but the retailer is normally the business that arranged the delivery and can investigate with the courier.
If the retailer keeps telling you to contact the courier, read our retailer says contact the courier guide.
Common “delivered but no proof” situations
| Situation | Why it matters | Useful guide |
|---|---|---|
| No delivery photo | There may be no visual evidence showing where the parcel was left. | No photo guide |
| Photo does not show your house | The photo may show the wrong door, flat, hallway or safe place. | Photo not my house guide |
| Delivered to wrong flat | Apartment blocks and shared entrances can cause wrong-flat delivery disputes. | Wrong flat guide |
| Safe-place claim but no proof | The courier may say it was left somewhere without showing where. | Safe place guide |
Simple wording to challenge weak proof
You can start with short wording like this:
Subject: Tracking says delivered but no clear proof — request for investigation
Hello, the tracking for my order says delivered, but I have not received the parcel.
Please provide the delivery evidence relied on, including the delivery photo if available, timestamp, full tracking history, safe-place note, neighbour or handover details, and any location evidence available to the courier.
At the moment, I have not been shown clear evidence that the parcel was delivered to my address, my authorised safe place, or someone I authorised to receive it. Please investigate this with the courier and confirm whether you will provide a refund, replacement or redelivery.
This is starter wording only. If the retailer has already refused, a stronger tailored letter may work better.
Need a stronger missing parcel letter?
Generate a personalised UK refund letter that asks for delivery evidence, challenges weak proof and requests a refund, replacement or redelivery.
Create My Refund Letter – £2.99If the retailer refuses because “tracking says delivered”
If the retailer refuses a refund, ask them to explain exactly what proof they are relying on. A refusal based only on a tracking status may be worth challenging if the delivery evidence is missing, unclear, inconsistent or does not match your address.
- If there is no photo: ask what proof shows the parcel reached you.
- If the photo is wrong: send a comparison photo of your actual door or building.
- If it was left in a safe place: ask whether you chose or approved that location.
- If it was left with a neighbour: ask for the neighbour name or address.
- If GPS is mentioned: ask whether the location actually matches your property.
For escalation, read our refund refused for missing parcel guide, chargeback for missing parcel guide and Section 75 missing parcel guide.
Related missing parcel guides
Tracking says delivered no proof FAQs
Is a delivered tracking status enough proof?
It can be evidence, but it may not be enough on its own if there is no photo, signature, safe-place note, neighbour detail or location evidence showing the parcel reached you.
What proof should I ask for?
Ask for the delivery photo, timestamp, full tracking history, GPS or location evidence if available, safe-place note, neighbour or reception details, signature or handover record, and the delivery address used.
Can I ask for a refund if there is no proof?
If the parcel has not reached you and the evidence does not clearly prove delivery to you, your address, your authorised safe place or someone you authorised, you can ask the retailer to investigate and provide a refund, replacement or redelivery.
What if the retailer says the courier confirmed delivery?
Ask what evidence the courier used to confirm delivery. A statement that the courier confirmed delivery is weaker if there is no supporting photo, timestamp, location evidence, safe-place detail or handover record.