

ACE - New Member
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282 Messages
The ONLY Way to Solve your Trade-In Issues
TLDR: Do not call AT&T Customer Service or the Returns Department, they will not be able to help you. File an FCC complaint and you will be contacted by someone.
https://consumercomplaints.fcc.gov/hc/en-us
Let me begin by saying that I have been an AT&T cellular customer since they purchased Cingular and have AT&T gigabit fiber in my home.
In November 2020, I saw a promotion for “Get a New iPhone 12 Mini for Free” and decided to look at the terms.
After reading the terms and conditions of the promotion (below), I decided to move forward with the Trade-In and upgrade.
I checked the estimated value of my trade-in using the AT&T online tool, and it estimated a $215 value for my iPhone X 256 GB.
Even if my phone was devalued by 50% from the estimate, I would still be eligible for the $700 in bill credits due to the phone’s trade in value being greater than $95. My phone was in fine condition with no cracks or major damage.
I performed a factory reset of the iPhone to make sure all data was deleted, this is mostly for my security but it is also one of the steps the return information indicates that you should do.
I shipped the old phone back to the “Trade-In” department and it was delivered to the address on the AT&T supplied label on December 2, 2020 – well within the 30 day timeframe allowed by the promotion.
I waited a few days and checked the status of my trade-in using the online link and was astonished to see this:
They were reducing the value of my phone by 82% for “Activation Lock not deactivated”. I would not be receiving my “Free iPhone 12 Mini” as the promotion outlined.
I immediately called the Trade-In department to see what was going-on. The individual I spoke to said, “There must have been a mix-up during the intake process. I’ll begin an investigation with our Tier 2 support group and they will contact you via email in 3-5 business days”. I was relieved as I thought this was going to be a fiasco. The agent set my mind at ease.
After 10 business days, I had still not seen a change to the trade-in value and decided to call the “Trade-In” department to see what I could learn. After waiting on hold for over 30 minutes, I spoke to an agent that was very terse, bordering on rude. She said she did not have access to the Tier 2 support records and could not tell me what the status of my “Investigation” was. She said “It could take weeks for them to email you. You just need to wait for the email”. I asked if I could have the email address for the Tier 2 department and I would reach out to them directly. She said she does not have the email address and I must wait for them to contact me. I was frustrated by the conversation, but realized I was at a dead end.
The next day I decided to see how I could prove if my phone activation lock had been deactivated when I performed a reset of my iPhone X. I reached out to Apple and spoke to their support team. They were very helpful and were able to determine that my iPhone lock, know as “Find My iPhone” has indeed been deactivated and the phone was “unlocked”. I asked for them to send me documentation and ended-up having to go through their legal department to obtain a transcript of the support call. See below:
At this point, I have invested over 12 hours in this ordeal, but I was ready and had the proof available for when the Tier 2 “Investigator” from the Trade-In Department did email me.
By Christmas, no email had arrived. New Year, no email had arrived. First week of January, no email had arrived.
I call back to the Trade-In department and they tell me that they will “Escalate my case to Tier 2 support”. I tell them this has already been done multiple times before, but I never receive any communication. The representative says, “All I can do is initiate an escalation”. I can tell there is a difference in the way this representative speaks in contrast to the Customer Service representatives I have spoken with at AT&T, he was more informal. I ask if he is an AT&T employee and he say, “No, I am with a company by the name of Hyla”. This is when the pieces start falling into place for me.
I call AT&T Customer Service (CS) and begin a feedback loop of frustration the likes of which I have never experienced before. AT&T CS refers me to the Trade-In department and I tell them that is a dead end. They say there is nothing they can do at CS. I ask for a manager and speak with someone that promises that they will look into this.
I have spoke to more than 15 CS representatives and 6+ managers over the course of 6 days. Each call lasts between 2 and 4 hours. I am usually disconnected at least once, sometimes 2-3 times during any given “session” and must start anew with a new representative.
I now have over 30 hours into my ordeal, but I am not willing to walk away from the $700 in bill credits I am qualified for. I have all the documentation I need.
I finally go into a retail AT&T store and spend 2 hours on the phone with a CS representative in the “Loyalty and Retention Department”. After 2 disconnects, the retail employee says, “There’s nothing we can do for you here. You should just call the Loyalty department from your own home.”
I go home and call back. I am disconnected again after more than an hour on the phone with another manager and decide that is enough for one day.
That evening, I search for “AT&T Trade-In issues” and “AT&T trade-in scam” and find this forum.
After reading several posts, I find one that says to contact the BBB and/or the FCC. I know that the BBB is generally a toothless threat, but decide to do it anyway.
Within two business days, I receive a call and email from the “Office of the President” (OOP) at AT&T. The individual says she reviewed my complaint and will honor the $700 in bill credits. I ask if I need to send the proof that my iPhone was not “locked” and she says, “No, I believe you.”
At this point, all the pieces fall into place. I realize that AT&T has contracted with a third party vendor, Hyla, to accept the trade-in phones. My guess is that the contract terms between Hyla and AT&T stipulate that Hyla is financially incentivized to de-value phones sent to them. The reason calls to the “Trade-In Department” go nowhere is that Hyla does not care. AT&T is the Hyla customer, not AT&T customers. We are nothing but noise to them.
I have asked the representative from the “Office of the President” send me an email outlining the terms that we have discussed as a resolution to our issue. She says she cannot do that as it would violate privacy rights. Huh?
As of today, 2/3/2021, I am keeping my BBB complaint open until I have written documentation from the Office of the President outlining the terms we have agreed-to.
This is a shame and a terrible way to treat people. AT&T knows what is happening and is not changing their procedures or informing their Customer Service representatives, not even the managers, of how to rectify the problems.
Shame on you AT&T, this is no way to treat your customers.
The solution: Do not call AT&T Customer Service or the Returns Department, they will not be able to help you. File an FCC complaint and you will be contacted by someone.
*I am not an AT&T employee, and the views and opinions expressed on this forum are purely my own. Any product claim, statistic, quote, or other representation about a product or service should be verified with the manufacturer, provider, or party.
Momof3inRB
New Member
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13 Messages
1 year ago
Don’t waste your time with BBB - submit a complaint to FCC via their website. You will be contacted ASAP by the Office of the President. Those FCC complaints must really impact them.
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QDad
ACE - New Member
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282 Messages
1 year ago
Agreed, submit the FCC complaint and you will be shocked at how quickly ATT reaches out to you.
It makes you wonder why their system is designed the way it is if they have the ability to solve issues very quickly.
Good luck!
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Perfectly
New Member
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2 Messages
1 year ago
In August of 2021 I traded in two Galaxy S9's and an iPhone 7+. The S9's were processed correctly and I started receiving the appropriate bill credits, but the credits for the iPhone 7+ never showed up. The AT&T tracking website showed that the phone was accepted and payment was issued in September 2021, but still no credits. I began to call AT&T for help. Almost everyone I spoke with was understanding and empathetic. They told me that THEY were going to help me and solve my problem, then without fail they would either hang-up on me or transfer me back into the que. Every. Single. Time. Every call was a minimum of 45 minutes - having to prove who I was and having to go over the entire story again and again. For the next 11 months I would call whenever I had a spare hour, but the problem was never resolved because AT&T has either designed the system to fail or is intentionally not fixing it. I finally found this thread and filed an FCC complaint. Four days after AT&T received the FCC complaint, my account has been credited the entire $700 as a lump sum rather than a monthly credit. I didn't even bother complaining to the representative who contacted me. AT&T knows exactly what is going on (this thread goes back over a year) and has chosen not to correct it. It's truly shameful and I would imagine illegal. If you're experiencing this same issue, save yourself the trouble and file the FCC complaint.
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morebull4u
New Member
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4 Messages
1 year ago
You now have until August do drop AT&T with no consequences. The price hike has opened an escape window to leave. Of course you have to send back all financed phones that still have payments left or pay them off.
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morebull4u
New Member
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4 Messages
1 year ago
Here it is in the Terms for the price hike:
Cancel your service
We understand that you may want to cancel your wireless service and we can assist you in reviewing your account. Call us at 800.331.0500 to discuss your cancellation options.
Have an installment plan on one of your devices?
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Lockdowncraziness
Former Employee
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2.1K Messages
1 year ago
@morebull4u uh yeah, you have to pay off the device if you don’t want to send it back. Price changes doesn’t not entitle you to free equipment.
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DBP
New Member
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3 Messages
1 year ago
I am SO glad I researched what other people were doing about this. I can confirm that filing an FCC report worked, and very quickly! I filed on a Friday, the FCC contacted AT&T on a Monday (today), and I received a call from AT&T within 5 hours offering to apply that $800 credit. Wow.
Considering the many many customer service issues I had even getting my order going (orders were dropped without any notice; but still hung out in the system), and fraudulent plan offers that finally did resolve but which literally took 22+ hours of time to fix, I knew contacting AT&T customer service would be a complete waste of time here.
Don't hesitate--fill out that FCC form!
(edited)
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29Mgomez
New Member
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1 Message
1 year ago
Thank you so much for this. My story is a little different: I went into an AT&T store and went in for the $350 upgrade credit. I had an iPhone SE (2nd gen) and I had a crack on the back screen. The employee ran the information in his tablet and stated that it still qualifies and confirmed for the $350 credit. He stated I had 30 days to turn in my phone if I wanted to do another backup and turn it in when i was ready to do so. So i processed the transaction, kept my old phone and walked out with my new phone. 11 days later i walk into another AT&T to turn in my old phone and I am told it does not qualify for it due to the crack. I call the store from where I purchased and another employee that helped me proceeds to tell me he accidentally selected the iPhone SE (3rd generation) instead of the 2nd gen. The 3rd gen with a crack still qualifies for the $350 credit. I call customer service and there is nothing they can do but to send me a return label and since im still within the 14 days return and they would waive the $50 re-stocking fee. Now, I still have the screen protector i purchased that was applied in store, a phone case, the adaptor (bc iphone pro max don't come with those), and a magsafe charger. I received a quote of $119 to replace the back screen, which at this point is still worth it but this is such a running scam if i was to send the phone and it gets rejected. I filled out this form you provided and i thank you, but i still have a few days to decide what i am going to do (especially removing this (Edited per community guidelines) screen protector).
(edited)
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shelant
New Member
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1 Message
1 year ago
Can someone please share what to write in the report to FCC? The instructions on their website say that my explanation should be 3-5 sentences and I am not sure how I can explain my problem with only 3-5 sentences.
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QDad
ACE - New Member
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282 Messages
1 year ago
@shelant
My FCC complaint stated that I believed that AT&T was engaging in a business practice the rhymes with "perceptive trade cactus" and that I was being defrauded out of the bill credits I was entitled to according to the promotional literature.
The important part is to mention "Trade-In" and bill credits. The OOP will reach out to you soon after the complaint is filed.
Good luck!
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