The only information in the letter is an object number, which I assume CTT have made up at the point of entry and an indication of the country of origin.
I have traced two items that have been posted to me from the UK, one is a personal letter from a friend who, knowing I collect stamps has included a few used stamps from countries around the world, and the second is a small parcel of quirky items bought from various shops around the UK, nothing from an e-commerce site.
Well I thought, let me try and disentangle one of these.
With so little information to go on, I chose a CTT generated object number at random from the letters, duly registered and logged in to the CTT web site and entered the CTT object number.
It appeared that I then had to select which e-commerce site I had purchased the unknown object from, of course the item was not purchased from an e-commerce site but there appeared to be no option for this.
In desperation I chose one at random, I was then asked to enter the invoice number? Again eventually I entered a random sequence of letters and numbers as an invoice number. This was accepted and I then had to enter a value for this CTT object which for a personal letter is ZERO. The CTT website would not accept a value of zero. At this point I gave up.
Reading the website, CTT announce that they will attempt to contact the e-commerce site, how they will do that is very unclear as the item was not purchased from an e-commerce web site. I have had to assume that they will contact the sender. After checking with the sender CTT have not contacted them as yet.
It seems that CTT are holding everything posted in the UK as if they are purchased on an e-commerce site regardless of any information to the contrary.
It would be helpful if CTT could give a little more information along with their own object number, such as the senders address.
I can only hope now that CTT will return the letters and parcels to the sender and not just destroy the objects as I will view that as theft.
It could be helpful to all if someone from CTT could explain how they decide an object is from an e-commerce web site and how they assume that an object always has a value greater than zero.
William, Tomar
Sending packages from Portugal to the UK or a non-EU country is now very complicated and expensive. I tried saving money by completing details at home via the CTT site but was unable to because you have to give the weight of the item. This means I now have to take anything I want to send out of the EU to my local CTT, where in my experience it takes the person at the counter a long time to deal with the order. It appears they need a lot of data, including email and phone number of the recipient, as well as your personal info. It all used to be so simple and much cheaper.
By Steve Andrews from Other on 11 Oct 2021, 13:33
Hi
I am portuguese and desperate with how my country is being spoiled by rich foreigners... and ironically I see in portuguese administrative mess a way for these guys to cannot take it anymore and go destroying another place with their speculation... Ironic ?
By Eduze from Lisbon on 11 Oct 2021, 13:44
Many foreigners in portugal had to experience this also. CTT has (had ?) a yes-message concerning their "friendship" with china. When I ordered several articles (of which portugal not even has heard of ...) they all "got lost" in portugal. CTT somehow renumbers deliveries and asks you for There Internal tracktracenumber when you come over to pick them up. Which they did ofcourse not inform you about. They can't and they know that and it is not about confusion but done deliberately. I lost some €125 then and have never ordered anything In Portugal since. I do all I can to avoid portugal to profit from there rather illegal system. It's simple : just order at any webshop in the eu outside portugal. Yes !
By Wilfried from Algarve on 15 Feb 2022, 21:47
@Eduze : are you denying this ??? It has nothing to do with money but all with mentality. And with facts.
Rich foreigners, destroying another place with their speculation ? Really ??? Pffuuuhhhh. Portugal wake up. Or don't. Or call Brussels for (more) "help".
By Wilfried from Algarve on 15 Feb 2022, 21:54