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Many New Jersey Amazon shoppers could be entitled to refund as company fixes refund error

TRENTON, NJ — Hey, New Jerseyans, you better double check your Amazon statements, because it looks like the online retail giant has shortchanged some of its customers who returned items and demanded refunds.

They never got them, and many are unaware.

Amazon is issuing refunds to a limited number of U.S. customers after identifying errors in its returns process, including unresolved cases dating as far back as 2018.

The move comes after an internal audit revealed that some customers either didn’t receive refunds due to unverifiable returns, or were refunded without the payment actually being processed. The online retail giant confirmed the issue in a statement Wednesday.

“Following a recent internal review, we identified a very small subset of returns where we issued a refund without the payment completing, or where we could not verify that the correct item had been sent back to us so no refund was issued,” Amazon spokesperson Maxine Tagay said in a statement to USA TODAY.

The company emphasized that customers do not need to take any action to receive the money owed. Amazon says the issue has been resolved and that new processes are in place to ensure future return discrepancies are addressed in a more timely manner.

Amazon has not disclosed the exact number of affected customers or the total amount being refunded. However, during a May 1 earnings call, Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky told investors that the company had taken a one-time charge of about $1.1 billion. The charge included costs associated with historical customer return issues and inventory adjustments related to tariffs, according to a report by Bloomberg.

Refund initiative follows $1.1 billion charge

The refunds are part of a broader quality control and compliance initiative at Amazon as the company addresses past logistical shortcomings. The retail giant routinely handles millions of returns annually, and discrepancies—while rare—can impact customer satisfaction and financial accounting.

The $1.1 billion write-down noted in Amazon’s first-quarter financials included not only unresolved returns but also expenses tied to managing excess inventory and preparing for potential trade-related costs.

The company said it has improved its return verification systems and will implement more direct communication with customers in cases of return anomalies. Details on the timeline for disbursing the refunds have not been released, but impacted customers are expected to see reimbursements processed automatically.

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