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Home Depot is a home improvement retail corporation that sells a wide variety of tools, appliances, and services to consumers all over the country.
This article covers many common complaint types that consumers bring against Home Depot, as well how to contact Home Depot customer service representatives, and how to sue Home Depot in small claims court.
Did you know we have a free tool powered by AI that helps you create a complaint letter to Home Depot? Check out our complaint letter tool.
Types of Customer Complaints Against Home Depot
At the time of writing this article, Home Depot has faced 12,449 Better Business Bureau (BBB) customer complaints; there were also 2,371 customer reviews averaging out to 1.12/5 stars. Here are some of the common Home Depot customer complaints:
Misleading product advertisement
Missing portions of an order
Damaged products delivered
Late or missing refund
Failure to cover fault under warranty
Bad installation on appliances
How to Reach Home Depot Customer Service
Before you escalate to the point of suing Home Depot in small claims court, you may want to take your Home Depot corporate complaints and contact Home Depot customer support and see if your issue can be resolved outside of court.
Home Depot customer service number: 1(800) 466-3337
Other ways to reach Home Depot Customer service:
Home Depot Facebook: @HomeDepot
Home Depot Twitter: @HomeDepot
Home Depot complaint line: 1-800-HOME-DEPOT
Send a Complaint Letter to Home Depot
If they ignore your informal requests, consider writing a formal letter, known as a demand letter or complaint letter, as this way, you can outline your requests in the letter, and notify Home Depot that you will seek further action if the issue is not resolved.
Here are some other reasons why you should consider sending a demand letter to Home Depot:
If you end up filing a small claims action against Home Depot, the judge in your case may ask you at your small claims hearing if you sent them a demand letter before suing. By sending a written demand letter, you have evidence of your attempt to resolve the problem out of court.
A demand letter signals to Home Depot that you are serious about the dispute and willing to take action to resolve the problem.
Did you know we have a free tool powered by AI that helps you create a complaint letter to Home Depot? Check out our complaint letter tool.
Here is a video on how our demand letter tool works:
How to File a Complaint with the BBB Against Home Depot
The BBB, or Better Business Bureau, is a non-profit that serves as a middleman between businesses, such as Home Depot, and consumers when there is a conflict that needs resolution. Any Home Depot corporate office complaints or general Home Depot complaints are almost always eligible to be submitted to the BBB.
How to submit your complaint against Home Depot
Scroll to the bottom of the page and click the button “Start Your Complaint.”
Go through the form and fill in all the information requested
What to expect once you submit your complaint to the BBB
The BBB will forward your complaint to Home Depot within 2 business days.
Home Depot's complaint department will be asked to respond within 14 days, and if a response is not received, a second request will be made.
You will be notified of Home Depot’s response when the BBB receives it (or notified that they received no response).
Complaints against Home Depot are usually closed within 30 business days.
How to Sue Home Depot in Small Claims Court
Send a Demand Letter to Home Depot
Before the issue is escalated to small claims court, it is usually recommended to send a demand letter. This letter can be mailed to Home Depot's headquarters.
Here are some common points you may want to consider including in your demand letter:
How much money Home Depot owes you
Why Home Depot owes you money
How you calculated how much Home Depot owes you
Be willing to give Home Depot 7-14 days for them to respond to your letter
After you have gone through with sending a demand letter, here are the general steps to suing Home Depot in small claims court:
Step 1: Prepare and File the Lawsuit.
Step 2: Notify Home Depot about the small claims lawsuit by serving them correctly.
Step 3: Prepare for your small claims hearing against Home Depot.
Each state has a different process for small claims court so you will want to review the process in your state. Review our 50-state guide to small claims court.
Step 1: Prepare and file the lawsuit
Prepare the lawsuit using the proper form, this is usually available for download on your local small claims court website.
The court will want to know why you are suing Home Depot, how much are you suing Home Depot for, and finally how you calculated the amount you are suing Home Depot for.
You will need to search for the correct legal name (legal entity name) Home Depot uses in your state on the Secretary of State website for your state.
File the lawsuit. There are several ways you can file the lawsuit (1) in person at your local small claims court, (2) by mail (3) electronically (not available in all courts), (4) by fax (not available in all courts).
Step 2: Notify Home Depot about the small claims lawsuit
Once the court returns the filed lawsuit to you, the next step is to serve Home Depot (serving means to notify Home Depot that they have been sued).
There are different rules on how to serve a company in each state so make sure you review the rules for serving that apply to you. In many states you will need to serve the “agent for service of process” that Home Depot selects in each state. This is usually a company or person that is authorized by Home Depot to receive lawsuit documents on its behalf.
To serve the small claims court lawsuit on Home Depot you most likely will have to serve their "Agent for Service of Process." This is a company that Home Depot has selected to receive lawsuits on their behalf.
Always make sure to confirm with the court if there are any additional filings you need to complete and file after you have served Home Depot.
Step 3: Prepare your small claims hearing
Prepare your statement for the judge. Be prepared to tell the judge why you are suing Home Depot.
Prepare your evidence. This is one of the most important steps to winning a small claims lawsuit! Evidence like screenshots, emails, and pictures, should be brought to the hearing (you should make a copy for yourself, the judge, and Home Depot).
Your evidence might include:
Emails with Home Depot representatives regarding your complaint.
Pictures of any damaged appliances or products
Other similar complaints other Home Depot customers may have had.
Did you know we have a free tool powered by AI that helps you create a complaint letter to Home Depot? Check out our complaint letter tool.
Camila Lopez, Esq.
Legal Educator at JusticeDirect. Camila holds a law degree and is a certified mediator. Her passion is breaking down complicated legal processes so that people without an attorney can get justice.