Taco Bell App Billing Disaster Causes Overdraft Fees

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Taco Bell Refunds Customer After App Billing Disaster Causes $210 of Overdraft Fees

Diners may choose to use the mobile app from their favorite fast food joint for a number of reasons: to easily customize their meal, to ensure they don’t have to wait in long lines to order, or to get in and out of the joint in a flash. One thing these customers likely don’t count on is having the charges for a month’s worth of app orders cleared on the same day, resulting in an overdrawn bank account through no fault of their own.

But that’s exactly what Consumerist reader S. says happened last month after he made several trips to his local Minnesota Taco Bell for orders placed through the company’s mobile app.

“I use the Taco Bell app, as it is quite handy, easy to customize my food, a breeze to pickup, and best of all, I don’t have to talk to someone who inevitably gets my order wrong,” S. wrote to Consumerist about his affinity for the fast food company’s app.

But his love affair with TBell came to a screeching halt in late October, when he awoke to find his bank account in the red.

“I had just looked the night before, and had plenty of money in it to cover pending charges, as well as an electronic payment incoming,” he says. “When I called the bank, they said that Taco Bell had charged 13 charges all at once the previous night, making my account go negative.”

Even though S. loves Taco Bell, he assures us he didn’t sleep-drive to the restaurant and place 13 separate orders.

Instead, he says a look at his account with the restaurant showed the company’s mobile payment processor never actually charged him for the previous orders placed through their mobile app.

“The pre-authorized charges were falling off my account without me noticing,” he says. “This represented an entire month’s worth of food. Needless to say this left me in quite a bind.”

In all, S. says he incurred $210 in overdraft fees directly related to $124.35 in orders that processed at the same time, meaning his account unexpectedly dropped $334.35 in a matter of a few hours.

“I know that I am partially at fault here, but even if I was mostly diligent with keeping track of these purchases, I still doubt I would have noticed an $8 purchase falling off my account because the processor didn’t actually charge it,” he says.

S. told us that attempts to contact both Taco Bell and the local franchisee by phone, email and Twitter appeared to be fruitless.

“I didn’t hear anything for a week…and their response was basically, tough titty,” he says. “‘Your fault, not ours’… The district manager even said to me over the phone, ‘well, you had extra use of the money for that period of time.'”

Consumerist reached out to Taco Bell on behalf of S. and the company quickly jumped into action to remedy the situation.

A member of the company’s Mobile App team reached out to S., refunding all the purchases that were charged and providing him a $50 gift card for his troubles.

While the company wasn’t able to do anything about the overdraft fees, S. tells us that his bank reversed the charges after the Taco Bell debits were reversed.

“I am happy with the outcome, but I really wish it hadn’t taken so long and required so much effort on my part to get it resolved,” he says. “From what I was told, I was not the only person affected in the area…several other people had the same issue, although not nearly as bad as mine.”

In fact, a team member told S. the issue was related to an upgrade of the company’s Mobile App system that resulted in all dormant charges going through at once. Still, the company didn’t provide him with a reason for why the charges were sitting there in the first place.

An earlier look at Taco Bell’s Terms of Use indicates that customers are charged at the time of purchase and that users are responsible for these transactions.

Our colleagues at Consumers Union say the terms are likely enough to keep the customer on the hook for the cost of the transactions, but that a month to process them seems outrageous.

When reached for comment, a rep for Taco Bell tells Consumerist that the situation was an “isolated incident in the sense that this did not happen nationally. It affected one franchisee who owns a handful of restaurants in S.’s area.”


This isn’t the first time we’ve heard of a fast food company processing a huge dump of payments all at once. In 2014, we told you about an Arby’s customer who saw six months’ worth of purchases charged to his account at once.

So what’s the moral of S.’s story? A few things, according to our Consumers Union colleagues: Always be vigilant about checking your bank accounts to make sure charges are going through correctly and be cognizant of your bank’s overdraft policies.

http://consumerist.com/2015/11/19/t...-old-orders-in-one-night-overdrawing-account/

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I guess we are so far from the days of writing checks, that it is now a business' fault if they don't process a transaction quickly enough.

Dh and I use a budget program, so any spending we make gets entered immediately. It wouldn't matter to us if the business processed it 1 day or 100 days later -- aside from being annoying when reconciling, we consider the money spent the second we make the purchase choice -- though we have an app to help track it, I can see how it would be a pain without one. But it still strikes me as a bit odd that the blame falls on the business, not the person who did the spending and really should have been aware of what was going on in his own accounts.
 
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Yeah, that's a lot of Taco Bell! though in my younger days I may have been guilty of similarly horrible eating practices. But in those days I kept a checkbook register too ;p
 

He doesn't track his expenses and it is Taco Bell's fault? Maybe he needs to go to an old fashioned expense tracking app.

I love YNAB. It is free and has a mobile app that I can enter in my charges immediately when I make them. Or with a fast food place, you can always ask for a receipt and then enter in that day's receipts in the evening. It shouldn't matter if a business charges all at one month or when the transaction was made no matter what their terms of service says. I agree that it is outrageous that Taco Bell waited till the end of the month to run all the charges. But that doesn't change the fact that S spent the money, ate the product, and didn't have enough money to pay for it. If you spend the money, deduct it out of your balance and you will never run into this problem.

Poor money management by S and he publicly slams Taco Bell enough that they have to eat the cost for his stupidity. Sad. Another example of an entitled, trophy for everybody, mentality.
 
Ouch! I would've assumed the payment was processed immediately. Although, I woulld never attach anything other than a GC to an app.
 
He doesn't track his expenses and it is Taco Bell's fault? Maybe he needs to go to an old fashioned expense tracking app.

I love YNAB. It is free and has a mobile app that I can enter in my charges immediately when I make them. Or with a fast food place, you can always ask for a receipt and then enter in that day's receipts in the evening. It shouldn't matter if a business charges all at one month or when the transaction was made no matter what their terms of service says. I agree that it is outrageous that Taco Bell waited till the end of the month to run all the charges. But that doesn't change the fact that S spent the money, ate the product, and didn't have enough money to pay for it. If you spend the money, deduct it out of your balance and you will never run into this problem.

Poor money management by S and he publicly slams Taco Bell enough that they have to eat the cost for his stupidity. Sad. Another example of an entitled, trophy for everybody, mentality.
However one does it, keeping track is absolutely necessary. It's sort of funny? sad? that it's almost considered old fashioned to track your account. Whatever. I don't think looking clueless increases someone's cool factor. :)
 
For years I didn't keep a check register. However, I was logging into my banks website and checking on it nearly every day. I didn't know down to the penny what was in my account but I was pretty close.

At one point my ex quit keeping track at all. He just set up overdraft protection on his credit card and it would draw over $25 each time he put the account in the red. And he did that a lot. I forget what the fee for that was, I want to say $15 each time or so.

A lot of times people complain about how high the fees banks charge for overdrafts. I used to think that but after working in a bank I noticed the vast majority of the time the people that would overdraft would do it every other week. Some people were ALWAYS in the negative. I knew of one woman who was in the negative for about 4 months straight. She would come in every week and say she didn't understand how she was in the negative on Wednesday since she deposited her paycheck on Friday. She just could not comprehend how her spending would keep her in the negative.

Since DH and I combined our finances I keep a check register religiously and man it chaps my butt when I am a few pennies off. I have spent a half hour before looking for a penny. I think I'm turning into my mother lol.
 
Since DH and I combined our finances I keep a check register religiously and man it chaps my butt when I am a few pennies off. I have spent a half hour before looking for a penny. I think I'm turning into my mother lol.

This is me to a T. I can't for the life of me, understand how people don't keep track of their checking account. I'm probably on the insane side because I keep an elaborate Numbers spreadsheet that has my entire monthly household budget on it, and all it have to do is put my available balance in one cell every morning. We don't use paper checks for anything, but my husband knows he better let me know about any charges that he's made where the tips, for example, aren't already on hold. And good lord, who the heck eats fast food 13 times in a month?! Gross!
 
I had this happen, sort of, one year at Christmas. It was the first time I ordered a lot of stuff from Amazon and I didn't realize they wouldn't charge for all of it at one time. I had kept a running total of my account, but when I sat down one evening to make sure it was all correct with my online account, I didn't see all of the Amazon charges (some of it had been taken out) and made the mistake of thinking that I had written it down wrong. Well, quite a shock in a day or two when another large amount came out of my account. It was covered and I didn't have an overdraft but could see it happening. But it taught me a lesson.

More and more people rely on the balance they get over the phone and online. They assume that the withdrawals they make through atms or purchases are automatic. So I can see where it can easily happen, I do think that people need to take heed about keeping an idea of their balances. But, then I don't use a debit card for these kinds of purchases, I use good old fashioned cash.
 
Wait... he got all his money back for the food he ate + a gift card + the bank reversed all the fees. What is wrong with the world that when you complain for YOUR mistake the company pays you.:confused3 I am sure he learned his lesson.

Yes, in this case the lesson is be lazy with your finances...blame someone else and make money while doing it.

Not to mention that I didn't realize people actually ate at Taco Bell.
 
He thinks he's partially at fault? That's sad.

Somebody was never taught how to actually balance a check book or savings account. What's actually sad that I know of a lot of kids that call and check their balance and available balance and just assume that everything that they did last week or the week before that had actually come through and cleared. They don't teach that in school. I know we had a class in high school that was a requirement for graduation, that taught this as well as many other basic living skills. Can't recall off the top of my head what that class name was. Now days - NADA!!! And lots of parents aren't much better.
 
Wait... he got all his money back for the food he ate + a gift card + the bank reversed all the fees. What is wrong with the world that when you complain for YOUR mistake the company pays you.:confused3 I am sure he learned his lesson.

Yep, he learned that it's ALWAYS somebody's else's fault for his own stupidity. Whine and cry until they pay you off to make you go away. And he'll no doubt continue to do the same in the future.

Anybody who eats at Taco Bell 13 times in a month doesn't have too many functioning brain cells to begin with.

But even back in the Stone Ages there were people like this dilwad. Many people wouldn't reconcile their checking account balances when the statements came in, and the if the checks they wrote last week didn't clear yet...Voila!!! Found Money!!!! The bank says I have more than I think I do, so the bank MUST be right!!!

And anyone with only $124 in their bank account who eats out so much, even at a cheap place like Taco Bell, isn't playing with a full deck.
 
Dude, if you only have $200 in the bank, maybe you shouldn't be eating out every day - and if you must, maybe watching the account would be kinda/sorta a good idea.
 
I can't help but think he thought TB wasn't charging him, that's why he brought so much food.

That's what I was thinking too.
I have noticed with a few stores the pending charges completely disappear and then show up as completed. Kohls is one place. I remember placing an order with them last Christmas and it was pending but once it shipped it totally disappeard from my account. I was nervous because I thought the order was cancelled or something but I had gotten a shipping notice. A few days later the completed transction showed up on my account.

I bet he thought there was a glitch and he wasn't being charged.
 
It would be cheaper to rent Taco Bell food by the hour. You only get use of it for about 2 1/2 hours.
 












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