Dunkin’ SCAM Exposed — Customers Rage Quit

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DUNKIN'S SCAM EXPOSED

Dunkin’ customers are discovering they’ve been systematically shortchanged on beverages through corporate policies that deliberately underfill cups, even when customers pay premium prices and request modifications like less ice.

Story Highlights

  • Leaked internal documents reveal that Dunkin’s policy mandates underfilling cups regardless of ice preference.
  • Customers paying $6+ for specialty drinks receive the same small portions regardless of whether they order regular, light, or no ice.
  • Frustrated patrons abandon Dunkin’ for competitors like McDonald’s, offering better value.
  • Coffee price inflation hits 18.9% while corporations simultaneously reduce product portions.

Corporate Policy Exposed Through Facebook Leak

An anonymous Facebook post in the 567,000-member Dunkin’ World group revealed internal company instructions directing baristas to follow predetermined “ice lines” when pouring beverages.

The leaked document shows specific pour levels for dozens of drinks, including iced lattes, macchiatos, chai drinks, and Americanos. Workers are explicitly told to pour identical amounts regardless of customer ice preferences, meaning patrons requesting no ice still receive the same reduced portion designed to accommodate a full cup of ice.

Customer Backlash Reveals Systematic Shortchanging

The revelation sparked hundreds of angry responses from customers who realized they’ve been paying full price for deliberately reduced portions. Customer HersheyChriss noted how “prices go up, but product amount decreases,” while Renee Keown declared she switched to McDonald’s because “they don’t fill it to the top with ice, leaving you with 2 ounces of coffee.” The policy particularly affects specialty beverages costing over $6, for which customers receive significantly less product than the cup size they purchased.

Employee Confirmations Validate Authenticity

Current and former Dunkin’ employees confirmed the policy’s authenticity in Facebook comments. A former manager stated, “THIS HAS ALWAYS BEEN POLICY,” and emphasized that customers “get what you pay for,” defending the practice of charging extra for additional products.

Several baristas acknowledged they cannot increase milk or espresso amounts without charging customers additional fees, even when cups appear visibly underfilled compared to advertised sizes.

Economic Pressures Drive Corporate Cost-Cutting

Dunkin’s portion-reduction strategy coincides with severe coffee price inflation affecting the industry. Ground coffee prices jumped 41% year-over-year to $9.14 per pound by September, while arabica futures hover near historic highs at $4.08 per pound.

Coffee inflation reached 18.9% annually, far exceeding the broader food inflation rate of 3.1%. Rather than absorbing these costs, Dunkin’ appears to be maintaining profit margins by reducing product portions while keeping prices high.

Consumer Exodus to Competitive Alternatives

The policy revelations prompted customers to seek alternatives offering better value. McDonald’s emerged as a popular choice, with customers praising their 99-cent large iced coffees and fuller portions.

Customer complaints focused on the fundamental unfairness of paying premium prices for deliberately reduced portions, especially when competitors provide full cups at lower costs. This represents a classic case of corporate greed prioritizing short-term profits over customer satisfaction and long-term loyalty.