16 Jan 2025 09:31 PM - last edited: 16 Jan 2025 09:34 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@RL11 wrote:
2 days is apparently acceptable
Two working days is the Openreach target time to fix a domestic fault. ISPs cannot offer better service to customers than they themselves get from the network provider.
After you’ve told us your broadband and/or talk isn’t working at all, we have two full working days to fix it. If it’s not fixed, we’ll pay you £9.76 for each day until it is.
Your compensation will start from the third full working day. So, if you told us about the problem on:
Tuesday - you’ll get compensation from Friday.
Friday - you’ll get compensation from:
Wednesday. Weekends aren't working days.
Or Thursday if there was a bank holiday on Monday. They aren’t working days.
https://www.sky.com/help/articles/auto-compensation
25 Jan 2025 11:35 AM
Hi @RL11
I complained to Sky regarding the £58 compensation and quoted your figures, thanks for that. Here is their reply:
"Thank you for reaching out to us and for your patience regarding this matter. I understand your concern about the compensation amount and your reference to the Ofcom Code of Practise for Automatic Compensation.
The compensation you received, £58.56, is based on the eligibility criteria set by Openreach and is in line with the Ofcom Voluntary Code of Practise for Automatic Compensation. The amount is calculated automatically by our system, ensuring it adheres to the guidelines."
Any suggestions please?
We are going abroad for a week so I won't be able to deal with this until after 2nd Feb.
Cheers.
25 Jan 2025 01:39 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Broseley89 wrote:So I won't get compensation because we could make outgoing calls!
Perhaps unsuprising in view of your earlier post?
25 Jan 2025 03:00 PM
I would ask them how they arrived at only 8 days, when you didn't have a proper service for 28 days. Let them know the dates (from/to) that your service was down. Of course they will only "automatically" calculate the compensation you got, if they only key in 8 days. Get them to key in 26 and it will "automatically" calculate more!
25 Jan 2025 04:30 PM
25 Jan 2025 04:31 PM
Thanks will do.
25 Jan 2025 04:53 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@RL11 wrote:
I would ask them how they arrived at only 8 days, when you didn't have a proper service for 28 days. Let them know the dates (from/to) that your service was down. Of course they will only "automatically" calculate the compensation you got, if they only key in 8 days. Get them to key in 26 and it will "automatically" calculate more!
I doubt it works that way. More likely it uses parameters captured automatically, such as when the fault was reported to Sky, the nature of the fault reported by Sky to Openreach and when Openreach confirmed resolution to Sky. I'd be surprised if a front line adviser can input directly the number of days without service.
25 Jan 2025 05:56 PM
Of course a human is unlikely to have worked out and entered the days of downtime but Sky should be able to provide the date range, that equates to 10 days of downtime that was used to calculate compensation for 8 days (10 - 2 allowed). I don't know how you go about proving it was a problem for longer but if it was me without a service for that long, I'd probably have a daily record of emails and messages chasing a solution until it got resolved 😂
26 Jan 2025 01:48 PM
Unfortunately Sky makes you email them through their website/app on a Contact Us form. So there's no sent emails you can check. However I phoned them, and have the record of that.
No problem. Browse or search to find help, or start a new discussion on Community.
On average, new discussions are replied to by our users within 80 minutes
New Discussion