Royal Mail lost a £3,000 gold and diamond ring but only offered a refund of £10 postage: SALLY SORTS IT

I run my own bespoke diamond jewellery business and in October last year, a client commissioned a piece for her 50th birthday. It was a special gift to herself as she has been fighting cancer for the last five years.

Her mother passed away recently and left her some jewellery, including an 18-carat gold ring. She asked me to incorporate the gold from this ring into her new design.

I made the ring and set it with diamonds. Since the finished item had to be hallmarked, I wrapped it up and took it into London. While there, I called in to see a friend in Bond Street and by mistake left the packet in his office. I did not realise until I returned home to Essex.

The next day, October 17, he posted it by Royal Mail Special Delivery for next day delivery and insured it for the maximum allowed sum of £2,500. The parcel did not arrive the following day, nor in the following days. When I tracked it all that came up online was that it was ‘in transit’.

I have tried on numerous occasions to contact Jubilee mail centre in Feltham, west London, the last place it had shown up on tracking. I’ve tried other sorting offices, but to no avail. I chased Royal Mail on Instagram and X. All I got via X, was that I could claim back the £10 postage.

All I want is to receive my item. My friend made a claim on the insurance but heard nothing. I am deeply concerned I will be forgotten about, and this claim has been lost in the system.

R. M., Brentwood, Essex

Sally Hamilton replies: I found your story upsetting on several levels. When we spoke on the phone, I could tell how low you were feeling still, more than two months after the event. You told me you had been to the doctor suffering from stress, you believe partly due to this disaster.

It wasn’t about the money lost — though the ring was priced at £3,000 — it was the heartache its disappearance had caused your client. The piece had important sentimental value because it contained the gold from her late mother’s ring. That’s something that cannot be replaced. When you broke the news to your client, she burst into tears, adding to your own woes and feelings of guilt.

But your situation was made worse by Royal Mail failing to respond properly to your requests for help in finding the missing ring. All its customer services offered to do was to return the £10 postage. What an insult. Your fury at this was compounded by the radio silence that followed after the insurance claim was made.

You thought you had done the right thing by using Royal Mail Special Delivery, with its next day guarantee, plus the £2,500 insurance cover should the worst happen. Though its cover fell short of the full value of the ring, your only option was to accept the limitations of the service.

If you could turn back time, I am sure you would have chosen to travel back into town to collect it by hand. But you put your faith in the national postal service to deliver the package safely.

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This it failed to do, and then it let you down a second time by failing to act swiftly to meet the genuine claim. I asked Royal Mail to take another look for the packet and if it could not be found, to pay up the insurance money pronto.

Within a day it came back to say your 60g package was last tracked to Royal Mail’s Jubilee mail centre, as you already knew, where it was scanned along with other items. Sadly, after that it vanished into thin air and there was no record of it being forwarded from there. A spokesman said there was now no way of knowing its location. The provider’s National Returns Centre has been contacted, but it has no record of it.

It is with a heavy heart that I think you must now accept the ring is probably gone for good. Whether it is lost, mislaid, or stolen, you will probably never know.

On my intervention, Royal Mail quickly sent out a cheque for £2,500 to your friend who had organised the special delivery.

You told me he has now transferred this cash to you. While you said you feel some satisfaction at the financial claim finally being met, it is a hollow victory as you would rather have the ring.

Royal Mail told me it will forward it to you if it does turn up. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that a miracle happens.Do you have a legal question

Can Sally Sorts It help you? 

Do you have a consumer problem you need help with? Email Sally Hamilton at [email protected] — include phone number, address and a note addressed to the offending organisation giving them permission to talk to Sally Hamilton. Please do not send original documents as we cannot take responsibility for them. 

No legal responsibility can be accepted by the Daily Mail or This is Money for answers given. 

> Read all of Sally Sorts It’s answers to readers 

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