User Posts: James
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8 Home Showing Tips To Convince Your Potential Buyers

A home is a place where your most profound memories are attached. It is full of beautiful images in your mind. It is a reflection of your soul and personality. ...

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8 Tips on Designing the House of Your Dreams

Design your dream house... Whether you are setting yourself to purchase a new home or design it by yourself, planning is an important step. In fact, it takes ...

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6 Most Common Plumbing Issues and How To Fix Them

Most Common Plumbing Issues and How To Fix Them... Plumbing issues, be it a leaking faucet or drainage complications, threaten to destroy the structural ...

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Where can I get financial help for cancer patients?

Where can I get financial assistance for cancer patients? Financial help for cancer patients treatment.

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8 Basic Tools for Home Plumbing Kits

Most DIY plumbers have at least a collection of basic tools to help them get through plumbing jobs around the house. As time goes along and you become more ...

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9 Best Ideas for Decorating Small Apartment

Ideas for Decorating Small Apartment... Apartments are gaining popularity among masses as people are now opting to live in small apartments compare to a huge ...

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12 Laundry Room Design Ideas to Inspire You

When it comes to planning the design and aesthetics of your home, the laundry room is not the first area that most homeowners consider. However, if you think ...

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9 Summer Essentials For Every House

Summer is just around the corner and everyone is getting ready to welcome it. In fact, every homeowner tends to update their house until the summer arrives in ...

Browsing All Comments By: James
  1. No. The receiver is not responsible for paying a courier’s flat tire, roadside assistance, or service call. Those costs are part of the courier company’s operating expenses, not the customer’s—especially not the receiving customer.

    A courier (or their subcontractor) cannot legally withhold a package addressed to you and demand payment for vehicle repairs. Doing so may be considered extortion, breach of contract, or an unfair trade practice, depending on local consumer protection laws.

    If this happens:

    Do not pay the driver directly

    Contact the courier company’s official customer support

    Ask for the demand in writing (most scammers refuse)

    File a complaint with consumer protection authorities if needed

    You are only required to pay pre-agreed shipping fees, customs duties, or taxes—not unexpected repair costs caused by the courier’s vehicle.

    Bottom line:
    A flat tire is the courier’s problem, not the receiver’s. If a driver demands money to release your package, that’s a serious red flag.

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