
The best approach to refunds and complaints for informal food sellers is a clear policy communicated upfront: full refund or replacement if the product is defective (wrong item, spoiled, damaged), store credit if the customer simply changed their mind, and no refund for products that were delivered as described. Nearly 9 in 10 consumers factor response time and resolution quality into future purchase decisions, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Most the Texas Cottage Food Law labeling reference complaints are not about product quality — they are about mismatched expectations. A customer who expected a 12-inch cake and received a 9-inch cake has a legitimate complaint. A customer who does not like the texture of your sourdough does not. Your policy needs to distinguish between these situations clearly.
The short version: Set a simple refund policy before your first complaint: defective products get a full refund or free replacement, no questions asked. Preference-based complaints ("I did not like the flavor") get a store credit toward a future order. All-sales-final applies to custom orders where the customer approved the details before production. Communicate this policy on your ordering page and in your order confirmations. When a complaint arrives, respond within a few hours, stay calm, and focus on resolution rather than defense. The vast majority of complaints from cottage food customers are resolved with a quick apology and a replacement product — not a refund. Most importantly, a complaint handled well turns a disappointed customer into a loyal one. A complaint handled poorly turns into a public review that scares off future buyers.
When someone complains about a product you made in your kitchen with your own hands using your family recipe, it feels like a personal attack. This emotional reaction is the biggest obstacle to handling complaints professionally.
Here is why cottage food complaints hit differently than complaints at a regular store:
Understanding this emotional dynamic is important because your first instinct — to defend your product, explain why the customer is wrong, or take the complaint personally — is the wrong response every single time. The right response is always to listen, acknowledge, and resolve.
Here is the mindset shift that makes complaints manageable: a complaint is not an attack on your cooking. It is information about a gap between what the customer expected and what they received. Sometimes the gap is your fault (wrong product, defective item). Sometimes it is their fault (unrealistic expectations, misread product description). Either way, the gap is real and the customer's frustration is real. Your job is to close the gap, not argue about whose fault it created.
The vendors who build the strongest local reputations are not the ones who never get complaints. They are the ones who handle complaints so well that the customer tells their friends: "There was a mix-up with my order but she fixed it immediately and even threw in an extra jar of jam. I will order from her every week."
Complaints fall into four categories, and each one has a different resolution:
The product is genuinely wrong: spoiled, damaged in transit, wrong item delivered, or missing from the order. These are clear-cut errors on your end.
Examples:
Resolution: Full refund or free replacement, no questions asked. This is your fault. Fix it immediately and apologize. Do not make the customer prove the defect, send photos, or jump through hoops. Trust them and replace or refund.
The product was delivered as described, but the customer does not like something about it. This is not a defect — it is a taste mismatch.
Examples:
Resolution: Store credit toward a future order, or an offer to make the next one differently. A full refund is not warranted because you delivered what was described. But a store credit shows goodwill and keeps the customer in your ecosystem. "I am sorry it was not what you expected. I would love to get it right for you next time — I will credit your next order."
A custom order does not match what the customer expected. This can be legitimate (you misunderstood their instructions) or subjective (they pictured something different than what they described).
Examples:
Resolution: If you can identify a clear miscommunication on your end, offer a partial refund or a discount on a replacement. If the product matches what was discussed and confirmed, offer a store credit. This is where having written order confirmations (with details, not just "birthday cake Saturday") protects you. For more on managing custom orders, our guide on deposits and partial payments for custom food orders covers how to set clear expectations upfront.
The customer is trying to get free food. They ate the entire cake and then complained that it tasted bad. They claim the product was defective but have no specifics. They dispute the Venmo charge after picking up and consuming the product.
Examples:
Resolution: Politely decline the refund. "I am sorry to hear that. Unfortunately, I am not able to offer a refund on a product that has been consumed. I will make a note for your next order and adjust if there is something specific you did not like." Do not accuse the customer of bad faith — just hold your policy. If the pattern continues, stop accepting their orders.
Keep it simple. Three sentences cover most situations:
"If your order is wrong or your product is defective, I will replace it or refund you in full, no questions asked. For preference-based issues, I offer a store credit toward your next order so we can get it right. Custom orders are non-refundable once production begins, but I will work with you to make it right if something does not match what we agreed on."
Post this policy:
The goal is for every customer to know the policy before they buy. When a complaint arises, you are not creating a policy on the spot — you are referencing one that was communicated in advance.
The response framework is the same regardless of the complaint type: listen, acknowledge, resolve, follow up.
The longer a complaint sits unanswered, the angrier the customer gets. A response within 2 to 4 hours signals that you take their experience seriously. Even if you need time to figure out the solution, reply immediately to acknowledge: "I am so sorry to hear that. Let me look into this and get back to you today."
Your first instinct will be to explain why the product was actually fine, or why the customer's expectation was unreasonable. Resist. The customer does not want an explanation. They want to feel heard.
Bad response: "That is actually how sourdough is supposed to taste. The sourness comes from the fermentation process, which takes 48 hours, and the flavor profile is exactly what artisan bakers aim for."
Good response: "I hear you — the flavor was not what you expected. I want to make this right. Can I send you a credit for your next order, or would you like me to make a milder version next time?"
Do not ask "what would you like me to do?" That puts the customer in the position of naming their own refund, which often leads to a more expensive resolution than necessary. Instead, offer a specific solution:
Most customers accept the first reasonable offer. You save money by proposing the solution rather than letting them dictate it.
A day or two after resolving the complaint, check in: "Hey, I just wanted to make sure you got the replacement and everything was good. Thanks for letting me know about the issue — it helps me improve." This follow-up turns a complaint into a positive touchpoint. The customer remembers that you cared enough to check in, not just that you had a problem.
Most complaints come from mismatched expectations. Here is how to align expectations before the sale:
An ordering platform like Homegrown helps here because your product descriptions, photos, prices, and pickup details are all in one place. There is no room for miscommunication when the customer reads everything on the ordering page before they buy.
For more on creating product descriptions that set accurate expectations, our guide on what to write in your Instagram bio when you sell food covers how to communicate clearly. And if you want to improve your ordering process overall, see our guide to the best online ordering systems for cottage food.
Offer refunds only on defective products (wrong item, spoiled, damaged). For preference-based complaints, offer store credit. For custom orders, follow your custom order policy (typically non-refundable once production begins). A blanket "full refund on everything" policy invites abuse and costs you money on products that were delivered as described.
Respond publicly with a brief, professional message: "I am sorry about your experience. I sent you a DM to get this resolved." Then handle the details privately. Public arguments damage your brand more than the original complaint. A calm, quick public response shows other customers that you take feedback seriously.
Take this extremely seriously. Respond immediately, express genuine concern for their health, and document everything. Ask what specific allergen they reacted to and check your ingredient list and recipe. If your product contained an undisclosed allergen, this is a serious issue that your liability insurance covers. If the allergen was listed on the label and the customer missed it, you are generally protected, but still respond with empathy. This is the strongest argument for clear labeling on every product.
No, but the customer's experience is always real. They may be wrong about what caused the problem, but they are not wrong about how they feel. Address their feeling first (frustration, disappointment), then address the facts (what happened, what you will do about it). Most complaints resolve themselves when the customer feels heard.
For a well-run cottage food business with clear product descriptions and quality control, a complaint rate of 1 to 3% of orders is normal. If more than 5% of your orders result in complaints, look for a systemic issue: inconsistent recipes, unclear product descriptions, packaging that does not protect the product, or pickup logistics that cause confusion.
For defective products (broken, spoiled, wrong item), asking for a photo is reasonable and most customers will happily send one. For preference complaints, do not ask for photos — it feels like you are demanding proof that they did not like something, which is adversarial. Trust your customers unless you have a reason not to.
If your margins are so thin that a single refund hurts your business, your prices are too low. Build a small refund buffer into your pricing — adding $0.50 per product covers occasional replacements and refunds without impacting your bottom line. At 20 orders per week, that is $10 per week in refund budget, which covers 1 to 2 replacements.
