

It was a toss up if it was fraud or from my efforts yesterday to order online. Then the next day I see 3 pending charges ($112.57, $1, $1). That payment posted to my bank account immediately. I say screw it and bought what I needed in the store that afternoon. I checked the billing address and tried again, got an error. I tired ordering online an item for $112.57, but when I clicked Buy it returned an error about the billing address. Good question, if you are having this issue and do get ahold of their customer service - is to ask if there is a different billing and shipping address for the "order".
Bed bath and beyond credit card check full#
While you are not immediately refunded, at least you do not have to wait the full turn around time to go through a claim. If you are able to catch this before your transaction goes from pending to a finalized transaction, then BBB may be able to stop that payment. Ours was found by first and last name and since it was still pending, BBB was able to cancel that transaction so that the funds are not pulled out and having to be returned by the bank. IF they cannot find your "order" that way, then they will need the full 16 digit number of the credit/debit card used. Had to call my husband, which was the card effected and called back to find out that they could first try to look up the transaction by the name on the card. Spoke with the first woman who said she needed the card number to look up information. Selected option 4, customer service and then option 5 - all other issues. After canceling my card and reporting a claim with the bank, I called 1800462-3966 (1800-GOBEYOND). I was charged a $400 charge this morning. In a best-case scenario such efforts are a simple but effective like-farming scam, which can lead to embarrassment if the "liked" page is converted into an unpalatable one with risqué or rude content.Store #651 is what every online transaction to is labeled. Often, the ruse results in a subscription for difficult-to-cancel “Reward Offers,” or simply the disclosure of personal details to social media grifters. They also instruct targets to complete out a simple survey and promise an outsized reward for a minor effort, a seemingly harmless task that often mines sensitive information such as e-mail addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth and credit card details.įinally, the completion of the "survey" never results in the receipt of a coupon for Bed Bath & Beyond (or any other known brand appropriated by scammers).

Although the scams exhibited minor variations, they all feature three main identifiers.Īll require Facebook users to forward the phony coupon on to their Facebook friends, increasing the number of potential victims.

This scam is almost exactly the same as earlier schemes targeting Home Depot, Costco, Amazon, and Kroger shoppers. The "coupon" displays a domain name not part of the chain's legitimate web site, and the link takes Facebook users to a fraudulent web site posing as part of Bed Bath & Beyond, and instructs them to follow a simple set of instructions: Bed Bath & Beyond warned customers about the circulating phony discount in responses on their Facebook page: In April 2017, a Bed Bath & Beyond coupon offer (purportedly good for $75 off any purchase) began circulating on Facebook under the guise of a Mother's Day promotion:
