Structure, tone, and legal citations for an effective demand letter. Used for billing disputes, refund requests, and contract violations. This guide covers disputing AT&T charges specifically for Juneau residents under Alaska consumer protection law.
Alaska: Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Act (Alaska Stat. § 45.50.471) — treble damages
Include your full name, address, phone, and email at the top. Date the letter. Include the recipient's name, title, and company address.
Describe what happened in chronological order. Include dates, amounts, account numbers, and reference numbers. Be factual, not emotional.
Reference the specific federal and state laws that protect you. For billing disputes: FCBA, EFTA, FTC Act § 5. For subscriptions: FTC Click-to-Cancel, ROSCA. For debt: FDCPA.
Clearly state what you want: refund, cancellation, account correction, etc. Include a specific dollar amount if applicable.
Give the company 15-30 days to respond. State that you will escalate (CFPB complaint, state AG, chargeback) if they don't resolve within the deadline.
Print, sign, and send via USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt. Keep a copy of everything. The green card proves they received it.
• Use 'firm' tone — professional but not aggressive
• Never threaten legal action you're not prepared to take
• A well-cited demand letter resolves 70%+ of disputes without escalation
• DisputeAI generates all of this automatically for $4.99