Cancel covered deals, demand repairs or refunds, and document fraud quickly.
Use this section for high-pressure sales, warranty disputes, and deceptive business practices.
Arizona source
Based on Arizona statutes and public court or agency materials.
Last updated
April 10, 2026
Statute cited
Arizona consumer cancellation and fraud protections
What to do first
Save the contract, receipt, ads, texts, and salesperson contact information.
Count the cancellation window immediately if the sale happened at your home or away from the seller’s normal location.
Write down what was promised, what was delivered, and the exact date you asked for a refund or repair.
Summary
Clear summary
Consumer problems often turn on receipts, timing, and written promises. Save your record before the story changes.
1. Preserve proof of the sale
Collect contracts, receipts, ads, photos of the product, and any text-message promises or invoices.
2. Act before the window closes
If you may have a cancellation right, send written notice and save proof of delivery right away.
3. Escalate with a clear demand
Use a demand letter that explains what you want repaired, replaced, cancelled, or refunded.
Guided flow
What kind of problem do you have?
Choose the closest match.
Frequently asked questions
Do I always get three days to cancel?
No. It depends on the transaction type. Use the cooling-off tool to estimate whether the rule may apply to your situation.
Should I cancel by phone?
Written cancellation is safer because it creates a timestamp and record you can preserve.
What if the seller promised something orally?
Write down the promise, identify witnesses, and preserve ads or messages that match what was said.

