Interactive Case Study: Automating Customer Refund Approvals From Start to Finish (Build With Me)
Goal: automate a high-volume, error-prone business workflow—customer refund approvals—with an AI-assisted decision step, a human checkpoint, and a final execution step that’s auditable and safe.
Who this is for: ecommerce operators, customer support leads, RevOps teams, and developers building workflow automation.
What you’ll build: a production-ready refund automation pipeline that:
- Triggers on a new refund request (from a helpdesk form, Shopify, Stripe, or Zendesk)
- Enriches the request with order history + risk signals
- Runs an AI reasoning step to recommend Approve / Deny / Escalate with justification
- Stops at a manual checkpoint for edge cases (human-in-the-loop)
- Executes the refund via payment processor API + updates the ticket + logs everything
Why Automate Refund Approvals? (And Why It’s Hard to Get Right)
Refunds are deceptively complex. The “happy path” is easy—approve a return within policy. The real work is all the exceptions:
- Customers with a history of chargebacks
- Items marked “delivered” but claimed missing
- High-value orders or suspicious account patterns
- Multiple partial refunds across the same order
- Policy nuances (final sale, subscription, usage-based services)
Manual handling slows response time and increases inconsistency. Fully automated refunds can increase fraud. The best approach is a guardrailed workflow that automates routine cases and routes ambiguous ones to a human.
SEO Keywords This Case Study Targets (How-To + Process Terms)
If you want this post to rank for practical, high-intent searches, include specific workflow language and industry terms. This tutorial naturally covers:
- how to automate refund approvals
- AI customer support automation workflow
- refund approval process automation
- human-in-the-loop customer service
- fraud-aware refund decisioning
- Stripe refund automation example
- Zendesk workflow automation for refunds
- refund policy enforcement automation
- customer refund triage automation
- audit logs for automated decisions
The System You’re Building (Architecture Overview)
You’ll implement a workflow with four key stages:
- Trigger: a new refund request arrives
- AI reasoning: model evaluates policy + context and returns a structured recommendation
- Manual checkpoint: only for exceptions or high-risk cases
- Execution: process refund + update systems + write audit trail
Workflow Diagram (Trigger → Reason → Checkpoint → Execute)
Use this as your mental model and as documentation for stakeholders.
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 1) TRIGGER: Refund request created │
│ - Helpdesk ticket / Shopify return / Stripe dispute │
└───────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────┘
│
v
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 2) ENRICH: Gather context │
│ - Order details, delivery status, customer history │
│ - Policy rules, item eligibility, fraud signals │
└───────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────┘
│
v
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 3) AI REASONING STEP (guardrailed) │
│ Output JSON: {decision, confidence, reasons, actions}│
└───────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────┘
│
┌──────┴─────────┐
│ │
v v
┌───────────────────┐ ┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ 4A) AUTO-APPROVE │ │ 4B) MANUAL CHECKPOINT │
│ - low risk │ │ - escalate if ambiguous/high risk│
└─────────┬─────────┘ └───────────────┬─────────────────┘
│ │
v v
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 5) EXECUTE + AUDIT │
│ - create refund, notify customer, update ticket/order │
│ - write audit log, metrics, idempotency safeguards │
└────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Define the Refund Policy as Machine-Readable Rules (Before AI)
AI should not be your policy source of truth. First, encode what you already know as deterministic rules. The AI step should handle nuance and text interpretation—not invent policy.
Example Policy Rules (Readable + Enforceable)
- Refund window: 30 days from delivery
- Non-refundable: final sale items, gift cards
- Auto-approve threshold: refunds < $75 and customer risk score low
- Manual review: customer has ≥ 2 chargebacks or refund amount ≥ $200
- Missing delivery claims: require carrier scan or photo evidence above $100
Policy Config (JSON)
{
"refund_window_days": 30,
"non_refundable_categories": ["gift_card", "final_sale"],
"auto_approve": {
"max_amount": 75,
"max_risk_score": 0.25
},
"manual_review": {
"min_amount": 200,
"min_chargebacks": 2
},
"missing_delivery": {
"evidence_required_over_amount": 100
}
}
Step 1 — Trigger: Capture the Refund Request
Triggers vary by stack. Common sources:
- Helpdesk ticket: “I want a refund” form (Zendesk/Freshdesk/Intercom)
- Ecommerce platform: return initiated (Shopify/WooCommerce)
- Payments: dispute opened (Stripe/Adyen)
- CRM: cancellation with refund request (HubSpot/Salesforce)
Minimum Refund Request Payload
Normalize events into one internal schema.
{
"request_id": "rf_01J...",
"source": "zendesk",
"ticket_id": "ZD-18374",
"customer": {
"customer_id": "cus_8821",
"email": "alex@example.com"
},
"order": {
"order_id": "ord_55419",
"currency": "USD",
"total": 129.00,
"items": [
{"sku": "TSHIRT-001", "category": "apparel", "final_sale": false}
],
"delivered_at": "2026-02-14T10:24:00Z"
},
"refund": {
"amount_requested": 49.00,
"reason_text": "Arrived damaged. Seam ripped on first wear."
},
"metadata": {
"ip_country": "US",
"customer_message": "Can you help ASAP?"
},
"created_at": "2026-03-28T12:03:00Z"
}
Step 2 — Enrich: Add Context (Order History + Risk Signals)
This is where most automations fail. Decisions require context. Enrich the request with:
- Customer refund history (count, amounts, outcomes)
- Chargeback/dispute history
- Delivery status + carrier scan info
- Item eligibility flags (final sale, subscription, digital)
- Fraud signals (velocity, mismatched addresses, high-risk regions)
- Support sentiment (angry language, threat of chargeback)
Enriched Context Example
{
"customer_stats": {
"lifetime_orders": 6,
"lifetime_spend": 611.20,
"refund_count_180d": 0,
"chargeback_count_365d": 0
},
"delivery": {
"status": "delivered",
"carrier": "UPS",
"delivered_at": "2026-02-14T10:24:00Z"
},
"risk": {
"risk_score": 0.08,
"signals": ["low_velocity", "address_match", "established_customer"]
},
"policy_flags": {
"within_refund_window": true,
"contains_non_refundable_items": false
}
}
Step 3 — AI Reasoning Step (Guardrailed, Structured Output)
This step interprets messy input—customer reason text, edge-case nuance, ambiguous policy mapping—then produces a structured recommendation you can automate safely.
What the AI Should Do (and Not Do)
- Do: summarize, classify refund reason, map to policy category, assess ambiguity, propose next actions
- Do: return a JSON decision with confidence + citations to inputs
- Don’t: issue refunds directly
- Don’t: override deterministic policy blocks (like final sale)
Decision Schema (JSON Contract)
Design your automation around a contract so it stays stable even if you swap models later.
{
"decision": "APPROVE | DENY | ESCALATE",
"confidence": 0.0,
"category": "DAMAGED_ITEM | LATE_DELIVERY | NOT_AS_DESCRIBED | FRAUD_RISK | OTHER",
"reasoning_summary": "short, user-safe explanation",
"policy_alignment": [
{"rule": "within_refund_window", "status": "PASS"},
{"rule": "non_refundable_category", "status": "PASS"}
],
"recommended_actions": [
{"type": "REQUEST_PHOTO_EVIDENCE", "required": false},
{"type": "OFFER_REPLACEMENT", "required": false}
],
"risk_notes": ["..."],
"human_review_required": true
}
Prompting Strategy (Practical, Production-Safe)
Use a system message that forces structured output, prohibits policy invention, and requires referencing inputs. Keep it short and operational.
System:
You are a refund-operations assistant. Use ONLY provided policy + inputs.
Return valid JSON matching the schema. Do not include extra keys.
If policy blocks refund, set decision=DENY with explanation.
If ambiguous or high-risk, set decision=ESCALATE and set human_review_required=true.
User:
Policy JSON: ...
Refund request: ...
Enriched context: ...
Node.js Example: Call AI and Enforce JSON Output
Below is an example using a generic “LLM client” pattern. Swap in your provider of choice. The key is: validate JSON before continuing.
// refundDecision.js
import Ajv from "ajv";
const ajv = new Ajv({ allErrors: true });
const schema = {
type: "object",
additionalProperties: false,
required: ["decision", "confidence", "category", "reasoning_summary", "policy_alignment", "recommended_actions", "risk_notes", "human_review_required"],
properties: {
decision: { enum: ["APPROVE", "DENY", "ESCALATE"] },
confidence: { type: "number", minimum: 0, maximum: 1 },
category: { type: "string" },
reasoning_summary: { type: "string", minLength: 10, maxLength: 600 },
policy_alignment: {
type: "array",
items: {
type: "object",
additionalProperties: false,
required: ["rule", "status"],
properties: {
rule: { type: "string" },
status: { enum: ["PASS", "FAIL", "UNKNOWN"] }
}
}
},
recommended_actions: {
type: "array",
items: {
type: "object",
additionalProperties: false,
required: ["type", "required"],
properties: {
type: { type: "string" },
required: { type: "boolean" }
}
}
},
risk_notes: { type: "array", items: { type: "string" } },
human_review_required: { type: "boolean" }
}
};
const validate = ajv.compile(schema);
export async function getRefundDecision({ llmClient, policy, request, context }) {
const messages = [
{
role: "system",
content:
"You are a refund-operations assistant. Use ONLY provided policy + inputs. Return valid JSON matching the schema. Do not include extra keys. If ambiguous or high-risk, ESCALATE."
},
{
role: "user",
content: JSON.stringify({ policy, request, context }, null, 2)
}
];
const raw = await llmClient.generate({
messages,
// If supported, enforce JSON mode:
response_format: { type: "json_object" }
});
let parsed;
try {
parsed = JSON.parse(raw.text);
} catch (e) {
throw new Error("AI returned non-JSON output.");
}
if (!validate(parsed)) {
throw new Error("AI output failed schema validation: " + ajv.errorsText(validate.errors));
}
return parsed;
}
Step 4 — Manual Checkpoint (Human-in-the-Loop That Doesn’t Slow Everything)
The manual checkpoint is not “send everything to a manager.” It’s a targeted review step that triggers only when needed:
- Decision is ESCALATE
- Refund amount above threshold
- Risk score above threshold
- Policy mismatch (AI says approve but a deterministic rule flags non-refundable)
Design the Review UI (What the Approver Needs to See)
Your reviewer should see:
- Customer request + summarized issue
- Order details, delivery status, and eligibility flags
- AI recommendation + confidence + reasons
- One-click actions: Approve / Deny / Request more info
- Audit trail: who approved, when, based on what
Manual Review Payload (What Gets Posted to Slack/Queue)
{
"review_id": "rev_01J...",
"request_id": "rf_01J...",
"recommended_decision": "ESCALATE",
"confidence": 0.62,
"summary": "Customer claims damage on arrival; within window; low risk. Evidence not provided. Recommend requesting photo or offering replacement.",
"quick_facts": {
"amount_requested": 49.00,
"delivered_days_ago": 42,
"within_window": false,
"risk_score": 0.08
},
"actions": ["APPROVE_REFUND", "DENY_REFUND", "REQUEST_PHOTO_EVIDENCE", "OFFER_REPLACEMENT"]
}
Best Practice: Escalate With “Next Best Action,” Not Just “Needs Review”
Even when routing to a human, AI should propose the next step: request a photo, offer store credit, offer replacement, or ask for a different return reason. This preserves speed and consistency.
Step 5 — Final Execution: Create the Refund + Update Systems + Log Everything
Execution must be deterministic. The AI can recommend, but execution code should follow explicit rules and user approval.
Execution Checklist (Production-Grade)
- Idempotency: don’t refund twice if the workflow retries
- Authorization: only approved requests can execute
- Validation: ensure refund amount ≤ paid amount and currency matches
- Audit logs: persist decision input + output + human action
- Notifications: customer update + internal note
- Metrics: approval rate, escalation rate, fraud outcomes
Pseudocode: Execution Orchestrator
if policy_blocked(request) then DENY
else
decision = ai_reasoning(request + context)
if decision == APPROVE and safe_to_autoapprove(context, policy) then
execute_refund()
notify_customer()
log_audit()
else
send_to_manual_review()
wait_for_human_action()
if human_approved then execute_refund()
else deny_or_request_more_info()
log_audit()
Example: Stripe Refund Execution (Node.js)
This snippet shows the deterministic execution stage. (You can adapt to Adyen/PayPal/etc.)
// executeRefund.js
import Stripe from "stripe";
const stripe = new Stripe(process.env.STRIPE_SECRET_KEY);
export async function executeStripeRefund({
paymentIntentId,
amountCents,
idempotencyKey,
metadata
}) {
// Always validate amount server-side.
if (!Number.isInteger(amountCents) || amountCents <= 0) {
throw new Error("Invalid refund amount.");
}
const refund = await stripe.refunds.create(
{
payment_intent: paymentIntentId,
amount: amountCents,
reason: "requested_by_customer",
metadata
},
{
idempotencyKey
}
);
return refund;
}
Example: Write an Audit Record (Database)
Store enough to be defensible in disputes and for internal QA, but avoid storing sensitive PII in logs.
{
"audit_id": "aud_01J...",
"request_id": "rf_01J...",
"event": "REFUND_EXECUTED",
"actor": "system|human:user_123",
"timestamp": "2026-03-28T12:10:00Z",
"inputs": {
"policy_version": "2026.03.01",
"risk_score": 0.08,
"amount_requested": 49.00
},
"decision": {
"ai_decision": "APPROVE",
"ai_confidence": 0.91,
"human_override": null
},
"execution": {
"processor": "stripe",
"refund_id": "re_3P...",
"idempotency_key": "rf_01J...:refund"
}
}
Putting It All Together: End-to-End Workflow (Runnable Skeleton)
This is a simplified “glue” example of the entire pipeline. In production you’d split into services, add retries, and use a queue.
// orchestrator.js
import { getRefundDecision } from "./refundDecision.js";
import { executeStripeRefund } from "./executeRefund.js";
export async function handleRefundRequest({ llmClient, policy, request, context, db }) {
// 1) Deterministic hard blocks
if (context.policy_flags?.contains_non_refundable_items) {
await db.audit.insert({ request_id: request.request_id, event: "DENIED_NON_REFUNDABLE" });
return { status: "DENIED", reason: "Non-refundable item." };
}
// 2) AI recommendation
const decision = await getRefundDecision({ llmClient, policy, request, context });
// 3) Decide whether to auto-approve
const amount = request.refund.amount_requested;
const safeAuto =
amount <= policy.auto_approve.max_amount &&
context.risk.risk_score <= policy.auto_approve.max_risk_score &&
decision.decision === "APPROVE" &&
decision.human_review_required === false;
await db.audit.insert({
request_id: request.request_id,
event: "AI_DECISION_MADE",
payload: decision
});
if (!safeAuto) {
// 4) Manual checkpoint
const reviewId = await db.reviews.create({
request_id: request.request_id,
recommended: decision,
status: "PENDING"
});
return { status: "PENDING_REVIEW", review_id: reviewId };
}
// 5) Execute refund
const refund = await executeStripeRefund({
paymentIntentId: context.payment.payment_intent_id,
amountCents: Math.round(amount * 100),
idempotencyKey: `${request.request_id}:refund`,
metadata: { request_id: request.request_id, source: request.source }
});
await db.audit.insert({
request_id: request.request_id,
event: "REFUND_EXECUTED",
payload: { refund_id: refund.id, amount }
});
return { status: "REFUNDED", refund_id: refund.id };
}
Interactive “Build With Me” Walkthrough: Test Cases You Should Simulate
To make your automation reliable, test with realistic scenarios.
Test Case A: Low-Risk, Within Policy (Should Auto-Approve)
- Amount: $29
- Delivered: 7 days ago
- Reason: “Wrong size”
- Risk: 0.05
Expected: AI approves, auto-approve passes thresholds, refund executes, customer notified.
Test Case B: High Amount (Should Escalate to Manual Review)
- Amount: $350
- Delivered: 10 days ago
- Reason: “Not as described”
- Risk: 0.10
Expected: AI may approve, but policy manual review threshold triggers.
Test Case C: Final Sale Item (Should Deny Deterministically)
- Item: final sale
- Reason: “Didn’t like it”
Expected: deny without AI or reg





