
Price Protection & Extended Warranty: Two Claims You Can File This Week
Most credit cards have quietly dropped price protection — but a handful still let you claim the difference when a price drops up to 120 days after purchase. Extended warranty is even more common. This issue covers both: exactly which cards qualify, the documents you need, the word-for-word script to file, and what to do when a claim gets rejected.

You paid full price. A week later it's 20% off. Congratulations — you can get that money back without asking nicely or hoping the retailer takes pity on you. Two legal mechanisms you may already own will do it: credit card price protection and credit card extended warranty. This is Issue 1 of Claw It Back. One mechanism per issue. Exact steps, the script, the clock.
What this is (and what it isn't)
Price protection is not the same as a store price-match. A price-match requires you to catch the drop before buying. Price protection lets you claim the difference after the purchase, from the credit card benefit — sometimes weeks later, sometimes from a completely different retailer's listing.
Extended warranty is different again: it kicks in after the manufacturer's coverage expires and replaces or repairs the item at no cost. Neither benefit requires you to buy a separate protection plan. You may already have both on cards sitting in your wallet right now.
These two tools are covered together in this issue because the claim process is nearly identical — same documents, same benefit administrator, same window logic.
Do you have these benefits? Check here first
Most major issuers killed price protection years ago. 1 American Express, Chase, Citi, and Discover no longer offer it on any personal card. The cards that still have it are specific products, not issuer-wide.
Cards with active price protection (2025–2026)
| Card | Window | Per-item max | Annual cap | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capital One Savor (World Elite tier) | 120 days | $250 | 4 claims/yr | World Elite Mastercard only — confirm your version |
| REI Co-op Mastercard | 120 days | $250 | 4 claims/yr | Mastercard benefit, not REI policy |
| Navy Federal More Rewards Amex | 30 days | $250 | $1,000/yr | Shorter window; military-affiliated eligibility |
| UBS Visa Infinite | 90 days | $500 | $1,500/yr | High annual fee card ($650/yr) |
| Capital One Spark Business cards | 60 days | $500 | $2,500/yr | Business cards only; some require price drop at physical store |
| Stat | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Days to claim (best) | 120 | Capital One Savor & REI Co-op Mastercard |
| Max per item | $500 | UBS Visa Infinite & Capital One Spark Business |
| Issuers that dropped it | 4 | Amex, Chase, Citi, Discover — all gone |
| Claim window (shortest) | 30 days | Navy Federal More Rewards Amex |
How to verify your card's version: Call the number on the back of your card and ask: "Does my card come with Mastercard or Visa price protection benefits?" Your card may be a Mastercard or Visa product even if it's issued by a bank, and the benefit rides with the network tier, not just the bank. 2
Cards with active extended warranty
Extended warranty is far more common. Most Visa Signature, Mastercard World Elite, and most Chase and Amex cards include it. Specific examples currently confirmed:
| Card | Coverage added | Manufacturer warranty covered | Per-claim max | Account cap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chase Sapphire Reserve | +1 year | Up to 3 years original | $10,000 | $50,000 |
| Chase Freedom Unlimited | +1 year | Up to 3 years original | $10,000 | $50,000 |
| American Express Gold | +1 year | Up to 5 years original | $10,000 | $50,000 |
| Stat | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Extra warranty years | +1 | Added to manufacturer coverage by most cards |
| Max per claim | $10,000 | Chase Sapphire Reserve & Freedom Unlimited |
| Account coverage cap | $50,000 | Per-card annual limit at Chase and Amex |
| Amex: max mfg warranty covered | 5 years | Amex Gold covers original warranties up to 5 yrs; Chase caps at 3 yrs |

If your card isn't listed, check your card's benefits guide — virtually every Visa Signature and Mastercard World Elite product includes some form of extended warranty. Look for "Extended Protection" or "Extended Warranty" in the benefits section.
The claim process: price protection
Time needed: 15–30 minutes
Realistic success rate: High when all documentation is present and the price drop is from a qualifying retailer. The most common rejection reasons are auction sites (eBay, Craigslist), limited-time flash sales, and prices found internationally.
Step 1: Find the lower price and screenshot it
You need: the product name, the current price, the date it was captured, and the retailer URL. A browser screenshot works. Print-screen it with the URL bar visible. If the retailer's site shows a "was $X, now $Y" sale, capture both numbers.
What doesn't count: eBay, auction listings, Craigslist, warehouse clubs (Costco prices are excluded by some issuers), and prices available only with a loyalty membership that costs money to join. 1
Step 2: Pull your documents
You need three things:
- Your original receipt (or e-receipt, or order confirmation email) showing the item, price paid, and date
- Credit card statement showing the charge
- The screenshot from Step 1 (or a printed store flyer)
Step 3: Call or go online to the benefit administrator
The claim goes to a third-party administrator — not your card issuer directly. For Mastercard benefits (including Capital One cards), the number is on the back of your benefits guide or on the Mastercard website. For Visa products, similarly. The administrator will ask for your card number, the item details, and then you'll email or upload the documents.
Script you can use:
"I'd like to file a price protection claim. I purchased [item] on [date] using my [card name]. I've found the same item currently listed at [retailer] for [lower price], which is within my card's [X]-day price protection window. I have my receipt, card statement, and a screenshot of the lower price. How do I submit these?"
Step 4: Wait
Claims typically resolve in 5–10 business days. The refund goes back to your card as a statement credit. You're not required to return the item.
The claim process: extended warranty
Time needed: 20–40 minutes
Realistic success rate: Strong for defects covered under the original manufacturer's warranty. Declined claims are usually for damage from drops, liquid, or "acts of war" — normal warranty exclusions. The card's extended warranty generally mirrors the manufacturer's terms, just extended in time.
Step 1: Check that the item qualifies
The item must:
- Have been purchased entirely with your eligible card (even splitting payment can disqualify)
- Have come with a manufacturer's warranty
- Be within the extended period (i.e., the manufacturer's warranty has expired, but the card's additional year hasn't)
Most electronics, appliances, and tools qualify. Consumables, software, vehicles, and items over the manufacturer's covered warranty period generally don't. 3
Step 2: Gather documents
- Original receipt or e-receipt
- Card statement showing the purchase
- The manufacturer's warranty card or documentation (if you have it — the box or manual often works)
- Description of what broke and when
Step 3: File the claim
- Chase cards: File online through the Chase benefits portal or call the benefits line. 3
- American Express cards: Call the Amex claims hotline — Amex does not accept online extended warranty claims. 3
- Other issuers: Check your benefits guide or the cardholder benefits portal. Capital One extended warranty claims go through their benefit administrator at 1-800-397-9010. 4
Script:
"I'd like to file an extended warranty claim. I purchased [item] on [date] with my [card name]. The manufacturer's warranty was [X months/years] and expired on [date]. The item [describe defect — stopped working / display failed / motor seized] and isn't covered by the manufacturer anymore. I'm within my card's extended warranty period. What documents do I need to send?"
Step 4: Send documents and wait
Some issuers will have the item inspected before approving a replacement or repair credit. Budget 10–20 business days. Repairs are sometimes authorized directly; large claims may require sending the item in.
Quick-check table: which claim fits your situation?
| Your situation | Right tool | Window | Key requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bought item, found same item cheaper elsewhere, still own it | Price protection | 30–120 days from purchase | Qualifying retailer listing, same item |
| Manufacturer warranty just expired, item broke | Extended warranty | During the extended period | Must have bought on eligible card |
| Store won't price-match their own drop | Store price adjustment (not this issue) | Usually 10–14 days, store-specific | Same store only |
| Item arrived defective | Chargeback / purchase protection (Issue 3) | 60–120 days | Different mechanism entirely |
What to do if your claim is rejected
A rejection isn't final. Common fixable reasons:
- Wrong retailer type: Re-check exclusions. If the price you found was on eBay or a flash sale, find the same price at a brick-and-mortar or mainstream e-commerce site.
- Just outside the window: Ask whether the lower price was advertised within the window even if you saw it later.
- Documentation gap: If you're missing the e-receipt, most issuers accept an order confirmation email or even a screenshot from your order history page.
- Escalate to the issuer: If the administrator denies a claim you believe is valid, call your card issuer's customer service and ask for a supervisory review. Benefit administrators occasionally make errors; the issuer has leverage to override.
Retail store price adjustment: the no-card fallback
If your card doesn't have price protection, some retailers will adjust the price themselves — but only within their own store and on a much shorter window. Common retailer policies still active in 2025: Costco (30 days, members only), The Gap/Old Navy/Banana Republic/Athleta (within 14 days), Kohl's and Macy's (within 14 days for non-clearance items). 1 This is narrower and slower — start with the card benefit.
What's in Issue 2
Next week: chargeback rights under Regulation E and the Fair Credit Billing Act — when you can dispute a charge because the goods weren't delivered, the seller disappeared, or the service was materially different from what was described. The actual federal law, the 60-day clock, and what "compelling evidence" means in practice.
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