Is it eBay's fault - in UK, some RM tracking services are only updated when delivery is confirmed, maybe same with Maltapost?
On 22nd November I ordered an item from an eBay seller in Germany to be sent to my address in Malta.
The eBay online tracking gave an estimated delivery date of 23rd December. The eBay tracking has not been updated at any time after an initial entry in late November saying the item is being sent abroad.
I was away for four weeks from 15th December. When I’m away, as I often am, the postman leaves parcels with a neighbour.
I returned last week to find no parcel with the neighbour and no “attempted delivery” cards. I sent a message to the eBay seller asking if he could trace the parcel through his local post office. I also went to my local post office. Both post offices gave the same information- apparently delivery was “attempted” on 3rd December, a day when I was at home all day. No card left. The parcel was returned to the sender on 21st December.
As of yesterday the parcel has not yet got back to the seller- of course RTS can take a few weeks as we all know, let alone with Christmas and new year in the middle of it.
Clearly this is a cock-up on the part of Maltapost. The seller isn’t at fault. Also there is a problem with eBay tracking information not being updated. But as of now, I’m around £120 down and don’t have the item I paid for. Hopefully the parcel will get back to him and I’ll happily pay fresh postage for him to ship it a second time.
But if it’s lost somewhere it’s not reasonable for either the seller or me to be out of pocket. Blame lies with Ebay (for not updating their tracking) and Maltapost (for not leaving an attempted delivery card). Any attempt at claiming from Maltapost will frankly be a pissing in the wind exercise, so my best bet is going to be to complain to eBay I guess?
I’d appreciate thoughts and advice, especially if anyone has experienced anything similar.
Is it eBay's fault - in UK, some RM tracking services are only updated when delivery is confirmed, maybe same with Maltapost?
One assumes the seller has full proof of posting etc etc as there was a tracking number. I believe it’s the seller’s responsibility until tracking shows parcel delivered. In this case (and if it were me selling) I would refund you as the buyer and then place a claim with Deutchpost (or whoever they use) for lost mail. If it’s anything like claiming with Royal Mail it gets processed and paid pretty quickly.
I could of course just file an “item not received” report with eBay (in fact I did as a first step) and then claim a refund into my PayPal account, but it seems unfair to me that the seller should have to pay for a problem not of his making. I just hope the RTS parcel is back with him soon.
Not sure how it works between the two countries mentioned, but if anything goes outside the uk from eBay then it goes to a shipping depot, once it reaches there it's no longer the sellers problem if anythings goes wrong, eBay take full responsibility.
It seems to me that, although it does feel unfair, it's just the way it works. The seller has contracted to deliver the item to you and has chosen to subcontract that job to their postal service (who in turn subcontracted further to Maltapost, but that's irrelevant to you). Thus the seller needs to refund you and then claim from their postal service if the item doesn't get returned to them.
This is clear cut.
You are due an item. If it doesn't arrive, you get a refund.
Seller is responsible for claiming for items lost-in-post from whomever they sent the item with. Hopefully they have used a service which provides insurance, but if not then that's the risk the seller took.
The only way eBay is on the hook is if the seller sent using eBays 'Global Shipping Service', which doesn't sound like the situation here. It's in no way eBays liability due to tracking updates through the eBay service, and if the tracking number was there then presumably nothing was preventing seller or buyer from checking for updates directly.
Let's not conflate separate things.
There is no doubt that this was an eBay purchase. But that doesn't mean that the seller necessarily used the Global Shipping Program.
The Global Shipping Program is not mandatory for eBay international sales as far as I know and also, as far as I know, is not available from all countries or to all countries.
You say it's "Clearly this is a cock-up on the part of Maltapost", but your blaming Ebay
If I have a tracked package on the way. Not only am I checking the senders PO tracking site, but also my home countries PO tracking to see who's more up to date on the info.
I never use Ebay's tracking unless it's a cheap item from a Chinese seller, but I can use worldwide tracking for it also
Although you may not know there was attempted delivery. Did you not check the tracking at all until you left on the 15th? PO's will hold a package for 15 days before returning.
I'm checking tracking 3 days after a package is sent and check every day. Even when told it could take 20 days just to be up to date on the information.
You are right though on Malta PO not leaving a card. Maybe take that up with the local PO
DON
My biggest lesson in this is that eBay’s tracking is unreliable and hence not fit for purpose on this type of international transaction.
I mostly buy from UK sellers and have items delivered to a UK address, and just click the eBay tracking which calls up whatever info is current with Royal Mail, or even the dreaded Hermes.
If I buy anything in the EU naturally I get it delivered to my address in Malta so as not to be stung with import VAT and handling charges. But in practice I do this much less often.
No, I didn’t check the tracking on Maltapost. Their own tracking used to be hopeless for international orders but has clearly been improved. I naturally assumed that eBay tracking would replicate whatever information there is from any carrier. If for some reason they can’t do this in a particular case, the tracking should give a clear message to check with the carrier.
We are all used to third party websites collating and replicating information from multiple sources, whether it be the various comparison sites, weather reports from anywhere on the planet or real time train and plane movements. eBay’s tracking link is or should be another example of this, but if it doesn’t work reliably it is worse than useless.
You can’t necessarily blame EBay’s tracking. Some delivery options from the UK and also from other countries only track internally or show as delivered but nothing in between if posted overseas. If the delivery option the seller used is one of these then EBay can’t show what isn’t available.
Regards overseas delivery using the EBay Global Shipping….assuming it’s the same in Germany but in the UK it’s by far the best option for overseas shipping as you only have to ensure it reaches the domestic hub. As long as it is received their then EBay take full responsibility for the subsequent onwards journey. If you choose to reject that option and post it yourself then,as a seller,you are completely responsible for the goods until either shown as delivered via a tracking number ,or positive feedback has been received from the buyer.