Hi everyone
I have just checked my credit card statement, and money paying for a service that I signed up for last year has been taken out again by way of auto-renewal of the service. Now, ordinarily, that wouldn't be much of an issue, except for the fact that they've charged it to the card on their file that expired since I signed up last year. Last year I used the service but decided a few weeks ago that I wouldn't sign up again. So I logged into my account management and tried to disable the auto-renewal, but I wasn't able to because their online system told me that the card on file had expired and that I'd need to update the expiration details in order to cancel the auto-renewal. Figuring that this was pointless given that their system was saying it had expired (which it did in February this year), I figured it wouldn't be possible for it to renew and left it alone. Yet, it has somehow managed to charge my account as today I see a charge for £129.99 on my credit card.
Now I've just spoken to Natwest, and the chap on the other end of the phone told me that for subscription based services, a credit card expiring makes absolutely no difference and they can charge it anyway. This makes absolutely no sense to me, as if I was to walk into a shop and try to pay for something with my expired card, they'd tell me to get stuffed. So how is this even possible, or even allowed? To me this is an unlawful transaction. What's the point in having an expiration date on a card?
I know now that I probably should have cancelled the auto-renewal, but how many people would go to the trouble of adding in their card expiration date, just so that they can cancel the service when the card expiring should prevent any further payments being taken? I would never have expected money to be charged to a credit card that has expired, and I'm sure many others wouldn't expect that either. Now I've got access to the service for another year and I still need to input my new expiration date just so that I can cancel the auto-renewal of the service. It seems completely pointless but now I know it is necessary because for some reason the banks allow such practice to occur.
Anyway, I just thought I'd post up as a warning to others here that would quite rightly believe that an expired card is just that, completely unusable, when in fact that isn't the case at all. Now I've got to try and get a refund from the company that charged me, or contact Trading Standards which will be interesting given that they're a US company. I very much doubt I'll see that money again.
I have just checked my credit card statement, and money paying for a service that I signed up for last year has been taken out again by way of auto-renewal of the service. Now, ordinarily, that wouldn't be much of an issue, except for the fact that they've charged it to the card on their file that expired since I signed up last year. Last year I used the service but decided a few weeks ago that I wouldn't sign up again. So I logged into my account management and tried to disable the auto-renewal, but I wasn't able to because their online system told me that the card on file had expired and that I'd need to update the expiration details in order to cancel the auto-renewal. Figuring that this was pointless given that their system was saying it had expired (which it did in February this year), I figured it wouldn't be possible for it to renew and left it alone. Yet, it has somehow managed to charge my account as today I see a charge for £129.99 on my credit card.
Now I've just spoken to Natwest, and the chap on the other end of the phone told me that for subscription based services, a credit card expiring makes absolutely no difference and they can charge it anyway. This makes absolutely no sense to me, as if I was to walk into a shop and try to pay for something with my expired card, they'd tell me to get stuffed. So how is this even possible, or even allowed? To me this is an unlawful transaction. What's the point in having an expiration date on a card?
I know now that I probably should have cancelled the auto-renewal, but how many people would go to the trouble of adding in their card expiration date, just so that they can cancel the service when the card expiring should prevent any further payments being taken? I would never have expected money to be charged to a credit card that has expired, and I'm sure many others wouldn't expect that either. Now I've got access to the service for another year and I still need to input my new expiration date just so that I can cancel the auto-renewal of the service. It seems completely pointless but now I know it is necessary because for some reason the banks allow such practice to occur.
Anyway, I just thought I'd post up as a warning to others here that would quite rightly believe that an expired card is just that, completely unusable, when in fact that isn't the case at all. Now I've got to try and get a refund from the company that charged me, or contact Trading Standards which will be interesting given that they're a US company. I very much doubt I'll see that money again.