Should customers get credits when service is skipped for weather, holidays, or access issues?
This is always an interesting debate for recurring service businesses.
I think a lot of the confusion comes from how customers view recurring billing versus how route-based businesses have to operate.
A customer may think:
“I pay monthly, so if you skipped one visit, I should get a credit.”
From their perspective, that makes sense.
But from the business side, monthly pricing is usually averaged out over the year.
Some months have 5 service days.
Some months have 4.
Some weeks take longer because of weather, extra growth, heavier debris, snow melt, backed-up yards, or delayed access.
For us, the monthly price is built around keeping the service consistent over time, not charging each individual visit like a separate transaction.
Weather makes this more complicated.
If there’s heavy snow, lightning, unsafe roads, extreme heat, or conditions that make the job unsafe, we may have to skip or adjust routes.
Access issues are another one.
If a gate is locked, an aggressive dog is outside, or the yard is not safely accessible, the technician still drove there, lost time on the route, and may have to communicate with the customer before moving on.
That skipped service still costs the business something.
Holidays can create the same problem.
If you try to reschedule every skipped holiday visit, the rest of the week can get overloaded fast.
Then one holiday affects:
- route timing
- employee hours
- customer communication
- payroll
- job quality
- the next day’s schedule
This is why I think the policy matters more than the individual situation.
Customers should know upfront:
- what happens when weather prevents service
- what happens when the gate is locked
- what happens when a dog is out
- which holidays are observed
- whether skipped visits are credited, rescheduled, or built into averaged pricing
- how communication will be handled
In our business, I don’t want technicians making case-by-case judgment calls in the field while the customer is upset.
That creates inconsistency.
The policy needs to be clear enough that the customer understands it before the issue happens.
That said, I also think there’s room for judgment.
If we make a mistake, that’s different.
If we miss a yard because of something on our end, we need to make it right.
But if service is skipped because the yard is inaccessible, unsafe, or affected by a policy the customer already agreed to, that should be handled differently than a company error.
Do you give credits when service is skipped for weather, holidays, or access issues?
Or do you build those situations into your monthly pricing and service terms from the start?