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Help & FAQ

Answers to the questions we hear most — plus a guide to Amazon tracking and how update timing works. Can't find what you need? We're one email away.

Last updated July 6, 2026

Jump to a topic
  • Getting started
  • Update timing & accuracy
  • Amazon tracking
  • Delivery windows & Smart Merge
  • Notifications
  • Pallet Pro & billing
  • Privacy & your data
  • Troubleshooting

Getting started

How do I add a package?

Tap the + button and paste or type a tracking number. Pallet detects the carrier automatically and starts following the shipment. You can give the package a name (like "New headphones") so it's easy to spot at a glance — that name stays on your device and is never sent to us.

Which carriers does Pallet support?

Over 3,000 carriers worldwide — from global couriers like UPS, FedEx, USPS, DHL, and Royal Mail down to smaller regional carriers — all in one place. You can also fold in your Amazon orders. If a tracking number isn't recognized automatically, you can choose the carrier yourself when you add it.

Do I need to create an account?

No. There's no sign-up, no password, and no email required to use Pallet. Your tracked packages sync automatically across your devices through your iCloud account, so what you add on your iPhone shows up on your iPad too.

Can I use Pallet on more than one device?

Yes. As long as your devices are signed into the same iCloud account, your packages stay in sync automatically. The name, notes, and sort order you set live on your device and sync privately through iCloud.

Update timing & accuracy

Pallet shows you the carrier's own tracking data — it doesn't move your package or invent scans. So the information tracks the carrier's, with one small, bounded difference: Pallet can be a little behind the carrier's own website, but never by much, and usually just minutes.

Why does an update show up later in Pallet than on the carrier's website?

When a carrier records a scan, that event travels from the carrier to our tracking partners and then through Pallet's own processing before it reaches you. Each step adds a little time. So now and then you may see an event on the carrier's own site a few minutes — occasionally up to a couple of hours — before it appears in Pallet.

Our promise: Pallet should never be more than a couple of hours behind the carrier, and for most updates it's a matter of minutes. If you ever see a gap bigger than that, we want to know.
The carrier's site says "Out for Delivery" but Pallet doesn't (or the other way around) — what gives?

Carriers often update their public website before they push the same update out through the data feeds that apps like Pallet rely on. So the carrier's own page can be ahead for a short while — this is upstream lag on the carrier's side, not a stall in Pallet. It typically catches up within minutes to a couple of hours.

If a status looks stuck for longer than that, email us the tracking number and we'll take a look.

How often does Pallet check for updates?

Pallet refreshes your packages automatically in the background, and checks more frequently as a package gets close to delivery. You can also pull down on your list to refresh on demand at any time.

Why did I get a notification when nothing seemed to change (or vice versa)?

Pallet notifies you on meaningful status changes — shipped, out for delivery, delivered, delivery exceptions, and signature-required heads-ups — not on every minor scan along the way. That keeps notifications useful instead of noisy. If a package picks up lots of intermediate scans without changing its overall status, you won't get pinged for each one.

Amazon tracking

Pallet can track your Amazon orders right alongside everything else — no tracking numbers to copy, and they stay linked to whichever carrier finishes the trip.

How does Amazon tracking work?

You sign in to your Amazon account once, inside Pallet, through a secure in-app browser that talks directly to Amazon. Pallet then reads your recent orders on your device to show their delivery progress, and keeps them updated next to your other packages.

Your Amazon email and password are never sent to Pallet's servers or stored by us — the sign-in happens between you and Amazon, exactly as it would in Safari.

Once you're connected, orders flow in on their own — there's no Amazon tracking number to copy or paste.

Where is Amazon tracking available?

Amazon tracking currently works with Amazon.com (United States) accounts. Support for other Amazon regions may arrive in a future update — if you'd like your region supported, let us know and it helps us prioritize.

Do I have to sign in to Amazon every time?

No. Amazon keeps you signed in for a long time — typically about a year. You'll only need to sign in again occasionally, for example if Amazon asks for a security check, if you sign out, or if it's been long enough that your session expires. When that happens, Pallet will let you know and it's a quick tap to reconnect.

Is signing in to Amazon safe? What can Pallet see?

Pallet only reads your orders and their shipment status so it can show delivery progress. It doesn't touch your payment methods, and it can't place orders or change your account. The reading happens on your device, and your credentials stay strictly between you and Amazon. See our Privacy Policy for the full picture.

How many Amazon orders can I track?

As many as you like. Amazon orders don't count against your package limit — they're unlimited on every tier, including the free one.

What happens when Amazon hands my order to USPS or UPS?

Pallet's Smart Merge stitches the Amazon leg and the final carrier's leg into one continuous journey, so you see the whole trip in a single place instead of two disconnected entries. More on that in Delivery windows & Smart Merge.

An Amazon order isn't showing up — why?

A few things can cause this:

  • Sign-in expired. If Pallet shows an Amazon sign-in prompt, tap it to reconnect and your orders will refresh.
  • Very new orders can take a little while to appear in your Amazon order history, and therefore in Pallet.
  • Digital items, gift cards, and some third-party marketplace orders don't have a physical shipment to track and won't appear.

Still stuck? Email us and we'll help.

Delivery windows & Smart Merge

What is a smart delivery window?

Instead of the broad "arrives sometime Tuesday" estimate carriers often give, Pallet draws a tighter arrival window from the route as it actually unfolds — where the package is, how fast it's moving, and how similar shipments have behaved. It's an estimate, not a guarantee, but it's usually more precise than the carrier's.

What is Smart Merge?

Many international shipments start with one carrier and finish with your local one. Smart Merge recognizes that handoff and joins both legs into a single, continuous journey — so a package that travels from overseas to your doorstep reads as one trip, not two separate tracking entries that each tell half the story.

Why is Pallet's estimated delivery different from the carrier's?

Pallet refines the estimate using the live route, which sometimes lands earlier, later, or in a narrower window than the carrier's headline date. When the two disagree, treat the carrier's official date as the formal commitment and Pallet's window as a sharper best-guess.

How does the signature heads-up work?

When a delivery is going to need someone to sign for it, Pallet aims to tell you the evening before — not at the moment the driver knocks — so you have time to plan to be home or make other arrangements.

What is the weather heads-up?

Pallet checks the forecast along your package's route and gives you a quiet heads-up when weather could slow things down. It's Pallet's own read of conditions where your package actually is — a helpful signal, not an official carrier delay notice.

Why is the package's position on the globe approximate?

The globe plots the scan locations the carrier reports along the way and draws the route between them. Between scans, the exact position is an interpretation of that data, not a live GPS feed — so think of the globe as a beautiful map of the journey so far, not a minute-by-minute tracker. Its accuracy depends on how much location detail the carrier provides.

Notifications

I'm not receiving notifications. How do I fix it?

Work through these quick checks:

  • Open iOS Settings → Notifications → Pallet and make sure Allow Notifications is on.
  • Check that a Focus mode or Do Not Disturb isn't silencing them.
  • Confirm the package is still active — delivered packages stop notifying.

If notifications are on and you're still not getting them, email us with your device and iOS version.

When exactly does Pallet notify me?

On meaningful status changes: when a package ships, goes out for delivery, is delivered, hits a delivery exception, or needs a signature. Pallet intentionally stays quiet during the many small in-between scans so your notifications stay meaningful.

Pallet Pro & billing

What's the difference between the free tier and Pallet Pro?

The free tier lets you track a set number of packages and includes the core experience. Pallet Pro raises that limit and unlocks the full set of extras. Amazon orders are unlimited on every tier. For the exact terms, see our Terms of Use.

How do I manage or cancel my subscription?

Subscriptions are handled by Apple. On your device, open Settings → [your name] → Subscriptions, tap Pallet, and you can change or cancel your plan there. If you cancel, Pro stays active until the end of the period you've already paid for.

I got a new phone — how do I restore my Pro subscription?

Sign in with the same Apple ID you used to purchase, then use Restore Purchases in Pallet's settings. Your Pro status will come back automatically.

Does Pallet handle my payment or store my card?

No. All billing is processed entirely by Apple through the App Store. Pallet never receives or stores your card details. For a refund, use Apple's Report a Problem page, since Apple handles all purchases.

Privacy & your data

What data does Pallet collect?

As little as possible. There's no account, no advertising, and no third-party trackers. Our servers hold only an opaque identifier Apple provides through iCloud and the tracking numbers you ask us to follow. Package names, notes, and preferences stay on your device. The full details are in our Privacy Policy.

How do I delete my data?

Remove any package from within the app to delete the link between you and that tracking number, or delete the app to remove all of those links. You can also email us to request deletion — reference the tracking numbers in question, since that's all we hold.

Do you sell my data?

No. We don't sell or share your data with advertisers, data brokers, or analytics networks.

Troubleshooting

My tracking number isn't recognized.

Try these steps:

  • Check for typos and remove any stray spaces or dashes.
  • Choose the carrier manually when adding the package, in case auto-detection guessed wrong.
  • Confirm the number tracks on the carrier's own website first — if the carrier can't find it yet, neither can we.
  • Give it time — a brand-new number often isn't trackable until the carrier physically scans the package for the first time, which can take 24–48 hours after a shipping label is created.
My package says "Delivered" but I don't have it.

First, a few common explanations: carriers sometimes scan a package as delivered a little early, or leave it in a less-obvious spot, or hand it to a neighbor, front desk, or household member. Check around your property and with anyone who might have received it, and give it up to a day — packages marked delivered do occasionally turn up shortly after.

If it still hasn't appeared, the next step is with the party who can physically locate it: contact the carrier (and, for a purchase, the seller or retailer) to open an inquiry. Because Pallet mirrors the carrier's data, we can't retrieve or re-route a package ourselves — but we're glad to help you make sense of the tracking history.

A package hasn't updated in a while.

Carriers sometimes go quiet between scans — this is common during long-haul transit and while a package clears customs. Pull down to refresh, and give it a little time. If a package looks genuinely stuck for an unusually long stretch, send us the tracking number and we'll investigate.

Pallet detected the wrong carrier.

Remove the package and add it again, selecting the correct carrier this time. Pallet re-points the record to the carrier you choose.

The app says it's offline, but my internet is working.

This is usually momentary — check that you're connected, then reopen the app or pull to refresh. If it persists, restart the app. Still no luck? Email us with your device and iOS version and we'll dig in.

Still need a hand?

Email us anytime

A real person reads every message. If your question isn't answered above, tell us what's happening and we'll help sort it out.

support (at) getpallet (dot) app →

We usually reply within a day or two. To help us solve things quickly, please include:

  • Your Support ID — tap to copy it from the app's About screen (Settings → About)
  • The tracking number your question is about
  • A short description of the issue you're running into
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