Something went wrong. A product broke sooner than it should have. A service wasn’t delivered as promised. A company is refusing to give you a refund.
And somewhere in the conversation with their customer service team, someone said: “I’m sorry, but that’s our policy.”
Here’s something worth knowing: company policy and your legal rights are not the same thing. In many cases, your legal rights are stronger than what a company’s policy says. And most companies count on you not knowing that.
This is exactly where AI helps.
What this is
A simple way to use AI to understand your rights as a consumer — so you know where you actually stand, what you’re entitled to, and how to ask for it effectively.
The simple rule
You have more rights than most companies want you to know about. The key is knowing what they are before you make the call.
Try this
Open ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI tool and paste this:
What you’ll actually get back
Here’s a real example.
Someone bought a washing machine. It developed a fault fourteen months after purchase. The retailer said the warranty had expired and there was nothing they could do.
They asked AI what their rights were. What came back: consumer law often protects purchases beyond the warranty — sometimes two to six years depending on the country. A failure after fourteen months may mean the product wasn’t of satisfactory quality. The retailer — not the manufacturer — is usually responsible. They were likely entitled to repair, replacement, or partial refund. Plus a clear script for what to say.
They called back. They referenced their legal rights. The retailer arranged a repair.
Same situation. Different knowledge. Different outcome.
Why consumer rights matter more than company policy
Every country with consumer protection laws sets minimum standards that companies must meet. Products must work as expected and last a reasonable amount of time. Services must do what they’re sold to do. What you receive must match what was advertised. And you are typically entitled to a repair, replacement, or refund when things go wrong.
AI helps you understand which of these applies — and what that means in practice.
Common situations and what to ask
Faulty product
Refund refused
Subscription you can’t cancel
Misleading advertising
If the company still refuses
Ask AI:
Common options include a chargeback through your bank or card provider, alternative dispute resolution services, consumer protection agencies, small claims court, and regulatory reporting.
Important note
Consumer rights vary by location. AI can guide you — but for anything serious, verify through a national consumer protection agency, a citizen advice service, or a legal professional if needed. AI helps you walk into those conversations informed.
The dispute you’ve been putting off
If something’s been sitting unresolved — this is the moment. Describe it. Ask what your rights are. Ask what to say. You may have more options than you think.
What to read next
→ How to Use AI to Write a Complaint Letter
→ How to Use AI When You Don’t Know What a Contract Says
→ How to Use AI Before a Banking or Financial Appointment
→ Or visit the Decision Hub for all decision-prep guides in one place