If your online order arrived cracked, dented, broken, soaked, incomplete, or unusable, you do not have to accept “seller policy” as the final answer. In the Philippines, a damaged item bought online may give you the right to ask for repair, replacement, refund, price reduction, or other remedies, depending on what happened and what evidence you have. This guide explains when a DTI complaint is proper, what law protects you, what to do first with the seller or platform, how to file through DTI, what documents to prepare, and what usually happens during mediation.
When Can You File a DTI Complaint for a Damaged Online Item?
You may file a complaint with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) when the dispute involves a consumer transaction covered by Philippine consumer protection laws, such as:
- The item arrived damaged, defective, or not working.
- The item does not match the listing, advertisement, photos, description, size, model, or promised condition.
- The seller refuses a valid refund, replacement, or repair request.
- The platform or seller keeps closing your refund request without properly addressing the defect.
- The seller blames the courier without helping resolve the issue.
- The item was advertised as brand-new, authentic, complete, or safe, but it was not.
- The seller uses “No Return, No Exchange” to deny a claim involving a damaged or defective product.
A DTI complaint is usually appropriate when the seller is engaged in business, including online selling through Shopee, Lazada, TikTok Shop, Facebook Marketplace, Instagram, a website, or another e-commerce channel. It may also apply to a seller outside a major platform if the sale was made online and the buyer is a consumer.
The stronger your case, the more you can show three things:
- You bought the item from the seller.
- The item was already damaged, defective, or non-conforming when delivered or when first used normally.
- You gave the seller or platform a fair chance to fix the problem, but the issue remained unresolved.
Your Legal Rights Under Philippine Law
The Consumer Act of the Philippines
The main law is Republic Act No. 7394, or the Consumer Act of the Philippines. You can read the full text through the Supreme Court E-Library copy of RA 7394.
For damaged or defective goods, the most relevant provisions are:
| Legal basis | What it means in practical terms |
|---|---|
| Article 11, RA 7394 | If a product is substandard or materially defective, DTI may require repair, replacement, refund, or reasonable damages. |
| Article 68, RA 7394 | Warranties must be honored. If there is a breach of express warranty, the consumer may elect repair or refund. Warranty repair should generally conform within 30 days, subject to conditions beyond the warrantor’s control. |
| Article 100, RA 7394 | Suppliers of durable or non-durable consumer products may be liable for quality imperfections that make the product unfit, inadequate, less valuable, or inconsistent with packaging, labels, publicity, or advertisements. If the imperfection is not corrected within 30 days, the consumer may demand replacement, reimbursement, or price reduction. |
| Article 164, RA 7394 | DTI may impose administrative sanctions, including orders involving recall, replacement, repair, refund, reimbursement, restitution, rescission, cease-and-desist orders, and fines. |
In ordinary language: if the product is defective or damaged through no fault of the buyer, the seller cannot simply say “store policy” and walk away.
The Internet Transactions Act of 2023
For online purchases, Republic Act No. 11967, or the Internet Transactions Act of 2023, is especially important. You can read the law through the Supreme Court E-Library copy of RA 11967.
For damaged online items, these provisions matter most:
| Legal basis | Practical effect |
|---|---|
| Section 20, RA 11967 | If there is a defect, malfunction, loss without the online consumer’s fault, warranty failure, or other liability from the contract, the online consumer may pursue repair, replacement, refund, or other remedies under the Consumer Act and other laws. |
| Section 24, RA 11967 | An aggrieved party must first use the internal redress mechanism of the digital platform, e-marketplace, or e-retailer before filing with a government agency or court. This is deemed exhausted if unresolved after 7 calendar days from filing. |
| Section 25, RA 11967 | The online merchant or e-retailer is primarily liable to indemnify the online consumer in civil actions or administrative complaints arising from the internet transaction. |
| Section 26, RA 11967 | An e-marketplace or digital platform may be subsidiarily liable in certain situations, such as failure to exercise ordinary diligence, failure to act on certain notices, or failure to provide contact details of a merchant with no legal presence in the Philippines. |
| Section 28, RA 11967 | The consumer may claim damages by filing a case before the court or DTI within 2 years from the time the cause of action arose. |
This is why it is important to file a refund or return request inside the platform first. For example, if you bought through Shopee, Lazada, TikTok Shop, or another platform, use the app’s return/refund or dispute feature and keep screenshots. If the matter is not resolved after 7 calendar days, you have a clearer basis to escalate.
“No Return, No Exchange” Does Not Defeat Valid Defect Claims
DTI’s Fair Trade Enforcement Bureau explains that a blanket “No Return, No Exchange” policy is not allowed when used to prevent consumers from exercising the 3Rs — repair, replacement, and refund — for products with defects or imperfections. DTI also notes that this protection does not apply to mere change of mind, buyer mishandling, disclosed “as-is-where-is” transactions, and similar situations. See DTI-FTEB’s guidance on “No Return, No Exchange” policies.
So the question is not simply “Does the shop accept returns?” The better question is: Was the item defective, damaged, unsafe, fake, misrepresented, incomplete, or not as promised?
Is the Seller, Platform, or Courier Responsible?
Online damaged-item disputes often become confusing because the seller, platform, and courier may point fingers at each other. Under Philippine law and practical DTI handling, start with the party that sold or facilitated the transaction, then include other relevant parties if necessary.
| Situation | Who to complain against or include |
|---|---|
| Item was packed poorly and arrived broken | Seller or online merchant; platform if bought through a marketplace |
| Box was crushed, wet, or visibly mishandled in transit | Seller/platform first, and courier if courier liability is directly involved |
| Seller sent the wrong item or damaged item | Seller or online merchant |
| Platform denied refund despite evidence | Platform/e-marketplace and seller |
| Seller is overseas but sale happened through a Philippine-facing platform | Seller and platform; RA 11967 may be relevant |
| Item is fake, unsafe, prohibited, or misrepresented | Seller, platform, and possibly other agencies depending on the product |
| Payment was taken but item never shipped and seller disappeared | DTI may help if it is a consumer transaction, but fraud may also involve the PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group or NBI Cybercrime Division |
In many cases, the most practical respondent is the seller plus the platform where the transaction occurred. The platform has records, refund mechanisms, seller information, and the ability to freeze or reverse transactions depending on its rules.
What to Do Before Filing with DTI
1. Document the damage immediately
Do this as soon as the parcel arrives, preferably before the return period expires.
Take:
- Photos of the unopened parcel, waybill, pouch, box, bubble wrap, and seals
- A continuous unboxing video if possible
- Close-up photos of cracks, dents, missing parts, leaks, stains, or error messages
- Screenshots of the product listing, including item description, price, warranty, return policy, and seller name
- Screenshots of your order page, payment confirmation, delivery status, and tracking number
- Screenshots of chat messages with the seller and platform
Do not throw away the packaging yet. In damaged-item cases, the box, bubble wrap, and waybill can be important evidence.
2. Stop using the item if use may worsen the damage
If the product is an appliance, gadget, tool, toy, battery-powered item, cosmetic product, food item, or anything that may become unsafe, stop using it once you notice the defect. Continued use may let the seller argue that the damage was caused by mishandling.
3. File the platform return/refund request
If you bought through an e-commerce platform, use the in-app return/refund system first. Under RA 11967, the internal redress mechanism is generally the first step before going to DTI, and it is deemed exhausted if unresolved after 7 calendar days.
State your concern clearly:
“The item arrived damaged. I am requesting a refund/replacement under the Consumer Act of the Philippines and the Internet Transactions Act because the item is defective/damaged through no fault of the buyer. Attached are photos, unboxing video, proof of payment, and delivery details.”
Avoid emotional or insulting language. Stick to facts, dates, photos, and your requested remedy.
4. Send a written demand to the seller
If the platform process fails or the seller refuses to cooperate, send a short written demand through chat, email, or any channel where you can preserve proof.
Include:
- Order number
- Date of purchase and delivery
- Description of the damage
- Your evidence
- Your requested remedy: refund, replacement, repair, price reduction, or reimbursement
- A reasonable deadline, such as 3 to 7 days
This helps show DTI that you tried to resolve the issue before escalating.
How to File a DTI Complaint for a Damaged Item Bought Online
DTI currently provides several complaint channels. DTI-FTEB’s published guidance says Metro Manila complainants may use the DTI Consumer CARe System, email a complaint form or complaint letter to consumercare@dti.gov.ph, or submit in person to the Fair Trade Enforcement Bureau. DTI’s e-commerce FAQ also states that complaints against online sellers may be sent to fteb@dti.gov.ph, with eco@dti.gov.ph copied. See the DTI pages on how to file a consumer complaint and e-commerce consumer FAQs.
For buyers outside Metro Manila, you may also file with the appropriate DTI Regional or Provincial Office. DTI offices often endorse complaints internally if another office is the proper handling unit.
Step-by-step filing process
Use the platform’s return/refund system first. Save the ticket number, chat logs, denial notices, and screenshots showing the issue was not resolved after 7 calendar days.
Prepare your complaint letter or DTI complaint form. DTI guidance requires the complainant’s and respondent’s complete details, narration of facts, demand, proof of transaction, and a government-issued ID.
Identify the respondent properly. Use the seller’s shop name, registered business name if available, platform name, email address, physical address if shown, mobile number, and profile link. For platform purchases, include the platform and seller details.
Attach evidence in an organized way. Label files clearly, such as:
01_Order Confirmation.pdf02_Proof of Payment.jpg03_Product Listing Screenshots.pdf04_Unboxing Video Link.txt05_Damaged Item Photos.pdf06_Seller Chat Screenshots.pdf07_Platform Refund Denial.pdf
File through the proper channel. You may use the DTI Consumer CARe portal, email, or in-person filing depending on your location and the type of complaint.
Wait for acknowledgment or instructions. DTI may ask you to complete missing details, clarify the respondent, provide a better address, or submit additional proof.
Attend mediation. If DTI accepts the complaint, the matter usually goes to mediation first. A DTI mediation officer helps the parties settle, often through refund, replacement, repair, return of the item, or another practical arrangement.
Proceed to adjudication if mediation fails. If the seller or platform refuses to settle, fails to appear, or does not comply, DTI may issue a Certificate to File Action or the matter may move toward adjudication, depending on the case and applicable procedure.
What to Put in Your DTI Complaint Letter
Your complaint letter does not need to sound like a court pleading. It should be complete, factual, and easy to verify.
Essential details
| Information | What to write |
|---|---|
| Your details | Full name, address, email, mobile number |
| Seller details | Shop name, seller name, address if known, email, mobile number, platform link |
| Platform details | Shopee/Lazada/TikTok Shop/Facebook/website, order number, ticket number |
| Item details | Product name, model, quantity, price |
| Transaction details | Date ordered, date paid, date delivered, payment method |
| Problem | Exact damage or defect |
| Your action | Refund request, seller chats, platform ticket, dates |
| Your demand | Refund, replacement, repair, price reduction, reimbursement, or other remedy |
| Attachments | Receipt, screenshots, photos, videos, ID |
Sample wording for the facts section
On 10 June 2026, I purchased one portable blender from the respondent’s online shop through [platform]. The item was delivered on 14 June 2026. Upon opening the parcel, I found that the blender jar was cracked and the motor base had visible dents. I immediately took photos and a video and reported the issue through the platform’s refund system on the same day.
The seller refused my request and claimed that the shop has a “No Return, No Exchange” policy. I also followed up through chat on 15 and 17 June 2026, but the matter remains unresolved. I am requesting a refund or replacement because the item was delivered damaged and unusable through no fault of the buyer.
Sample demand
I respectfully request that the respondent be directed to provide a refund or replacement, including the cost of returning the damaged item if return is required, and to comply with the applicable provisions of Republic Act No. 7394 and Republic Act No. 11967.
Required Documents for a DTI Complaint
Prepare the following before filing:
| Document | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Government-issued ID | Confirms your identity as complainant |
| Order confirmation | Proves the transaction |
| Official receipt, invoice, e-receipt, or payment proof | Shows amount paid and payment method |
| Product listing screenshots | Shows what was promised or advertised |
| Photos of damaged item | Shows visible defect or damage |
| Unboxing video | Very useful when seller claims buyer caused the damage |
| Waybill and packaging photos | Helps show delivery condition and courier details |
| Chat logs with seller | Shows refusal, admission, promises, or delays |
| Platform dispute screenshots | Shows you used the platform redress mechanism |
| Warranty card or manual, if any | Helps if the claim involves express warranty |
| Repair report or technician assessment, if available | Useful for gadgets, appliances, and higher-value items |
If you are abroad, you can usually prepare a signed complaint letter, scanned ID, and digital evidence. If DTI or a later proceeding requires a sworn or notarized document, an overseas Filipino or foreign complainant may need consular notarization or an apostilled document, depending on the purpose and the receiving office’s requirements.
Practical Timelines: What Usually Happens
Actual timelines vary depending on the DTI office, completeness of documents, seller location, platform responsiveness, and whether the respondent appears.
| Stage | Practical timing |
|---|---|
| Platform return/refund request | Usually within the platform’s own deadline; under RA 11967, unresolved internal redress is deemed exhausted after 7 calendar days |
| DTI acknowledgment or initial review | Often within several working days, but may vary |
| Mediation notice and conference | Can be scheduled within days or weeks depending on service of notice and docket volume |
| Mediation period | Under DTI mediation rules, mediation is intended to be fast and may be completed within a short working-day period, with possible extension by agreement |
| Settlement compliance | Often immediate or within a date stated in the mediation agreement |
| If mediation fails | The case may proceed to further action, adjudication, or issuance of a Certificate to File Action depending on the circumstances |
In practice, many damaged-item complaints settle at mediation because the cost of continued dispute may be higher than the refund or replacement. The common bottlenecks are incomplete seller details, missing proof of purchase, unclear photos, expired platform return windows, and respondents who cannot be served because the buyer only has a username.
What Remedies Can You Ask For?
Your demand should match the problem. Do not ask for everything if a simple replacement will solve the issue.
Common remedies include:
- Replacement of the damaged item with the same item in good condition
- Refund of the amount paid
- Repair at no cost, if repair is reasonable and acceptable
- Price reduction if you are willing to keep the item despite minor damage
- Return shipping at seller’s cost if the item must be sent back
- Reimbursement of necessary expenses directly related to the complaint, when justified
- Administrative action if the seller engaged in deceptive, unfair, or unconscionable practices
Under RA 11967, if you choose refund or replacement, the online merchant or e-retailer is generally entitled to the return of the original goods delivered, without cost to the online consumer, unless the parties agree otherwise.
Common Pitfalls That Weaken DTI Complaints
Waiting too long
File the platform complaint immediately. Many online platforms have short return windows. Even if your legal rights may extend beyond the app deadline, delay makes evidence weaker and gives the seller more defenses.
Throwing away the packaging
For damaged deliveries, packaging matters. Keep the pouch, box, foam, bubble wrap, waybill, and seals until the case is resolved.
Only sending cropped screenshots
DTI and the respondent need context. Include screenshots showing the date, order number, seller name, platform, and full conversation thread where possible.
Using abusive language in chat
Even if you are upset, keep messages professional. Under the Internet Transactions Act’s online consumer conduct provisions, consumers are also expected to act with ordinary diligence, honesty, good faith, and respect.
Asking for a refund because of change of mind
DTI protection for damaged or defective products is different from buyer’s remorse. If the item has no defect and you simply changed your mind, the seller’s return policy may control unless the platform voluntarily allows returns.
Failing to distinguish damage from misuse
If the seller claims buyer mishandling, your best evidence is a prompt report, unboxing video, delivery photos, and proof you stopped using the item once the damage was discovered.
Naming the wrong respondent
A complaint against “seller from Shopee” is weak if there is no shop name, order number, or platform ticket. Identify the seller as completely as possible.
Special Situations
What if the seller is on Facebook or Instagram?
You can still file if the seller is engaged in business and the transaction is consumer-related. Attach the page link, profile link, chat thread, proof of payment, delivery details, and any posted product listing. The hard part is identifying and serving the seller, so collect as much information as possible before the page disappears.
What if the seller is overseas?
If the seller has no legal presence in the Philippines but sold through a platform operating in the Philippines, include the platform in your complaint. RA 11967 has rules on the responsibilities and possible subsidiary liability of e-marketplaces and digital platforms in certain situations.
What if the courier caused the damage?
Still start with the seller or platform if the sale was through an online merchant. The seller or platform may have the shipping contract, insurance, or claims process with the courier. If the courier is separately responsible, DTI or the platform may direct the proper handling, but your immediate consumer claim is usually against the party that sold or facilitated the transaction.
What if the item is unsafe?
If the item is not just damaged but dangerous — for example, overheating electronics, leaking batteries, contaminated goods, counterfeit cosmetics, unsafe toys, or fire-risk appliances — say so clearly in your complaint. Include photos, videos, and any injury or safety details. DTI may treat safety concerns more seriously, and other agencies may also become relevant depending on the product.
What if the seller offers repair only?
Repair may be a valid first remedy, especially for warranty-covered products. But if repair is not done within the legal or reasonable period, if the defect keeps recurring, or if repair will not restore the product’s quality or value, replacement, refund, reimbursement, or price reduction may become appropriate under RA 7394.
The Supreme Court has recognized in consumer cases that suppliers may be liable for unresolved product imperfections. In Mazda Quezon Avenue v. Caruncho, the Court stated that a supplier is liable for product imperfections it cannot resolve within the warranty period. In a later consumer protection development involving defective brand-new vehicles, the Supreme Court also stated that the Philippine Lemon Law is not an exclusive remedy and that consumers may still avail themselves of remedies under the Consumer Act; see the Supreme Court’s notice on Department of Trade and Industry v. Toyota Balintawak, Inc. and Toyota Motor Philippines Corp. through the Supreme Court announcement on defective brand-new vehicles.
DTI Complaint vs. Small Claims Court
A DTI complaint is often the more practical first step for damaged online purchases because it is designed for consumer redress and mediation. But in some cases, especially when the seller ignores DTI, damages are disputed, or enforcement becomes difficult, a court case may be considered.
| Option | Best for | Practical notes |
|---|---|---|
| Platform dispute | Fast refunds within app rules | Must be filed quickly; save screenshots |
| DTI complaint | Consumer complaints involving defective, damaged, misrepresented, or unfairly handled products | Usually starts with mediation; useful for pressure and documentation |
| Small claims case | Recovery of a sum of money when settlement fails | Filed in court; simplified procedure; no lawyer required for small claims hearings |
| Police/NBI cybercrime report | Scam, identity fraud, fake seller, account takeover, or intentional deception | Different from ordinary damaged-item disputes |
For many consumers, the best sequence is: platform dispute → written seller demand → DTI complaint → further action if unresolved.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I file a DTI complaint if the item was bought from Shopee, Lazada, or TikTok Shop?
Yes. If the item was damaged, defective, not as described, or the seller/platform refused a valid remedy, you may file a consumer complaint. Use the platform’s return/refund process first and keep proof that the issue remained unresolved.
Do I need an official receipt to file a DTI complaint?
An official receipt or invoice is best, but DTI guidance recognizes proof of transaction. For online purchases, useful proof includes order confirmation, payment screenshots, e-receipts, delivery details, waybill, and platform transaction records.
What if the seller says “No Return, No Exchange”?
That policy cannot be used to defeat valid claims involving defective or damaged products. DTI recognizes the consumer’s right to repair, replacement, or refund when the product has defects or imperfections. But if there is no defect and you only changed your mind, the seller may refuse unless its policy or the platform allows returns.
Should I ask for refund or replacement?
Ask for the remedy that reasonably fixes the problem. If the item is unusable, unsafe, or substantially damaged, refund or replacement may be appropriate. If the defect is minor and you are willing to keep it, a price reduction may be practical. If the item can be repaired quickly and properly under warranty, repair may be reasonable.
How long should I wait before filing with DTI?
For online platform purchases, file the platform dispute immediately. Under RA 11967, the internal redress mechanism is deemed exhausted if unresolved after 7 calendar days from filing. After that, or once the platform clearly denies your valid claim, you may escalate to DTI.
Can OFWs or Filipinos abroad file a DTI complaint?
Yes, if the transaction is connected to a Philippine consumer matter and you have the necessary evidence. You may file online or by email where accepted. If a representative in the Philippines will attend or sign documents for you, DTI may require written authority and proof of identity. For more formal proceedings, notarization, consular acknowledgment, or apostille issues may arise depending on the document required.
What if the seller blocked me or deleted the listing?
Take screenshots immediately if the listing is still visible through order history, browser cache, email notifications, or platform records. Include the seller profile, shop URL, order number, payment proof, courier details, and chat history. Blocking a buyer does not erase the transaction.
Can DTI force the seller to pay me?
DTI may facilitate settlement through mediation and, in proper cases, proceed under its adjudication and enforcement mechanisms. RA 7394 allows administrative remedies and sanctions, including refund, replacement, repair, restitution, rescission, and fines in appropriate cases. Actual results depend on jurisdiction, evidence, service of notices, and the respondent’s participation or liability.
Is a damaged parcel always the seller’s fault?
Not always. Damage may be due to poor packing, defective product quality, courier mishandling, warehouse issues, or buyer mishandling after delivery. But as a consumer, you generally start with the seller or platform because they arranged or facilitated the transaction. The seller and platform can then address courier responsibility internally if applicable.
Can I complain if the item is second-hand?
Yes, but the claim is harder if the item was clearly sold as second-hand or “as-is” and the defect was disclosed. However, if the seller concealed a serious defect, misrepresented the condition, or sent an item materially different from what was promised, you may still have a valid complaint.
Key Takeaways
- A damaged item bought online may give you rights to repair, replacement, refund, reimbursement, price reduction, or other remedies under Philippine law.
- Use the platform’s return/refund mechanism first. Under RA 11967, unresolved internal redress is deemed exhausted after 7 calendar days.
- “No Return, No Exchange” cannot defeat valid claims for defective or damaged products.
- Your strongest evidence includes proof of purchase, photos, unboxing video, waybill, packaging photos, seller chats, and platform dispute records.
- File through the DTI Consumer CARe System, email channels published by DTI, or the proper DTI regional/provincial office.
- In your complaint, clearly state the facts, attach organized evidence, identify the seller/platform, and specify the remedy you want.
- Many DTI consumer complaints are resolved during mediation, but incomplete evidence and missing seller details can slow the process.