Quick fix: Check the billing date, the cancellation date, and the email that received the receipt. Those three details usually explain the denial.
Next step: Do not escalate blindly. First identify whether the charge was a valid renewal, the wrong account, or a truly incorrect billing event.
Start Here: Refund Denial Check
- Check whether the charge happened on your usual renewal date
- Check whether you canceled before or after that date
- Check which email received the billing receipt
- Check whether the request included the correct billing details
- Check whether you may have contacted support about the wrong Grammarly account
Why Grammarly Rejected the Refund Request
1. Grammarly treated the payment as a valid renewal
If the charge happened before cancellation took effect, Grammarly may treat it as a normal renewal.
What this means: Your access may remain active for the current billing period, but the refund may still be denied.
2. The wrong account was referenced
Many users have multiple Grammarly accounts across personal and work emails.
What this means: Support may deny the request if the charge was tied to a different account than the one you checked.
3. The request did not include enough proof
If the request lacked the charge date, invoice email, or account details, support may not have had enough information to review it properly.
What this means: A stronger follow-up request may still help.
What To Do After a Grammarly Refund Denial
- Find the exact billing date and amount
- Find the email that received the charge receipt
- Compare the charge date with your cancellation timing
- Log in to every Grammarly account you may have used
- If your first request was incomplete, send a clearer follow-up with all billing details
- If the charge is clearly incorrect, contact support again with invoice evidence