Legal · Complaints
Complaints Procedure.
How to raise a concern, what to expect from us, and your statutory escalation routes if you’re not satisfied. Last reviewed: 27 June 2026.
If something has gone wrong — with a Build With Alderframe service, a product, a payment, or your data — we want to know and we’ll work to fix it quickly. This page is the formal procedure required under the UK Provision of Services Regulations 2009.
Step 1 — tell us
Email [email protected] with the subject line “Complaint”. Include:
- your name and (if relevant) project name or invoice reference;
- what happened, with dates;
- what outcome you’d like;
- any supporting screenshots or emails.
We aim to acknowledge every complaint within 2 working days and to give a full response within 14 working days. Most complaints are resolved at this stage.
Step 2 — final response
If our first response doesn’t resolve the issue, reply asking for a “final response”. The founder of Alderframe will personally review the case and write back with a final position within 30 calendar days of your original complaint. The final response will explain the outcome, the reasons, and what (if anything) we offer to put things right.
Step 3 — if you remain unsatisfied
If our final response doesn’t resolve your concern, you have several statutory escalation routes depending on the nature of the complaint:
If it’s about a service we sold you (UK consumers)
You may refer the dispute to a UK-approved Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) provider. We do not subscribe to a specific ADR scheme, but you may use any provider competent for digital services such as those listed by the UK Government ADR register. Your local Citizens Advice consumer service can guide you through this: citizensadvice.org.uk/consumer · 0808 223 1133.
If it’s about your statutory consumer rights
Your local Trading Standards service can investigate breaches of the Consumer Rights Act 2015 or the Consumer Contracts Regulations 2013. Find your local office via tradingstandards.uk/consumers.
If it’s about a card payment
If the dispute is specifically about a card transaction (rather than the service behind it), you can raise a chargeback with your card issuer. You can also complain to Stripe Payments UK Ltd directly — Stripe is FCA-authorised (FRN 752443) and operates its own complaints process. As an FCA-regulated firm Stripe is within the remit of the Financial Ombudsman Service for eligible complainants. Alderframe LTD is not itself a regulated financial-services firm.
If it’s about your personal data
You may complain to the UK Information Commissioner’s Office — the data-protection regulator. Phone: 0303 123 1113. Web: ico.org.uk/make-a-complaint. You don’t need to come to us first, but we’d prefer the chance to fix it.
If it’s about online safety / harmful content
For complaints about content on SaySpace, follow the in-app reporting flow first, then see our Safety & Moderation page. Persistent or systemic concerns can be escalated to Ofcom, the regulator for the Online Safety Act 2023: ofcom.org.uk/online-safety.
If it’s about accessibility
For accessibility concerns about alderframe.co.uk or any Alderframe product, email [email protected] — we take these seriously and aim to fix issues quickly. Persistent concerns about a regulated digital service can also be raised with the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
Court action
Nothing in this procedure prevents you from issuing court proceedings instead, particularly for UK consumers in the small claims track of the County Court. We’d strongly prefer to resolve any concern directly first — it’s faster, free, and almost always reaches a fair outcome.
Records
Alderframe LTD keeps a confidential record of complaints and their resolution for reasonable governance and continuous-improvement purposes, in line with our Privacy Policy and UK GDPR. We never share complaint records with third parties without your consent or a legal requirement.
Solicitor-review note. This complaints procedure is published in good faith and reflects current UK consumer-protection and regulatory law as Alderframe LTD understands it on 27 June 2026. It is not legal advice and does not affect any statutory right you may have.