At Christmas time I changed carriers from Sprint to Verizon. We moved over four lines, bought two new iPhones and brought over two iPhones. The promo going at the time was WINTER250 where we could g...
See more...
At Christmas time I changed carriers from Sprint to Verizon. We moved over four lines, bought two new iPhones and brought over two iPhones. The promo going at the time was WINTER250 where we could get $250 visa gift cards per phone that was brought over. AMAZING! I was able to get one of the gift cards, but the other was denied. The reason for the denial...I changed my phone number about 45 days into the contract. My rebate was invalid because, “You must maintain the line for at least three months” I called Verizon several times and was transferred to several departments. I must have spent AT LEAST 2 hours on hold (no joke). Eventually, they opened an ‘escalation’ and I was to be notified after two weeks. Two weeks pass and there is no call. I call Verizon to find out and no one EXCEPT the employee who opened the escalation can access the results (talk about silos). The employee isn’t responding to messages and isn’t calling me even though other employees can see that he is scheduled to call me. I end up contacting Verizon another 3-4 times until someone decides to connect me with a manager who is able to see that the escalation was closed with comments that state the rebate could not be fulfilled because the line of service was not maintained for the required number of weeks. This whole encounter has left a bad taste in my mouth. Oh, and it cost $15 to change my phone number because I did it through their website...but if I had done it through the app, it would have been free. The ENTIRE point of making sure service is maintained is that people don’t just hop on Verizon for the visa gift cards and leave, right? I am not doing that. I lived out of state for several years and recently moved back to CA so I wanted to change my phone number. All four lines are still going and Verizon gets plenty of money from me every month. TLDR: I didn’t wait 2 more weeks to change my phone number, so I lost $265.