The AARP is an Insurance Agency Disguised as a...

A AARP customer review by GetHuman user ~MB from November 25th, 2017

Background on ~MB's case

GetHuman: ~MB - can you tell our other AARP customers when your case took place?
~MB: Yup. It was late at night, on November 18th.
GetHuman: Did you reach out to AARP, and if so, how?
~MB: I used the 888-687-2277 number I found for on the GetHuman AARP customer phone number page I was on: AARP Customer Service Phone Number
GetHuman: And which of these common AARP customer issues best describes the reason you wanted to talk to them?
(Shows ~MB a list of common AARP problems)
~MB: "Membership issue" was why I was trying to call.

~MB's review of AARP customer service

GetHuman: So how would you sum up your experience for GetHuman's AARP customer community? We'll censor any IDs, numbers, or codes and any inappropriate words here out of respect to the millions of other customers using this resource.
~MB: The AARP is an Insurance Agency Disguised as a Nonprofit Organization. **The AARP makes out like it never profits from the sale of insurance products to its members. When you read their ads it seems as though they are only endorsing these products because they offer good value to their members. In fact the AARP is an insurance agency and earns commissions on every insurance policy it sells. It uses its nonprofit status to shield its earnings from federal taxation and then funnels all this money into electing left wing politicians and lobbying for ultra-liberal legislation. **People who believe that the AARP is some kind of a watchdog for senior citizens are just deceiving themselves. Recently, the AARP became an enthusiastic supporter of Obama Care even though Obama Care will rob the Medicare Trust Fund to give free health care for people who never paid into the system. The fact that Obama Care guarantees that Medicare will go broke doesn't bother the AARP in the least. All t
GetHuman: Let's quantify your experience contacting AARP. On a scale of 1 to 5, how easy is it go get help on a AARP problem?
~MB: I'd give them a five out of five for ease of finding your way to help.
GetHuman: What about quality of communication. How would you rate that on a 1 to 5 scale?
~MB: I'd give them a five out of five on communication.
GetHuman: And what about AARP's ability to quickly and effectively address your problem?
~MB: For that I would say four out of five.
GetHuman: And finally- any advice for other AARP customers?
~MB: Call them early in the day or late. Don't forget any personal or account information you might need for AARP to know who you are.
GetHuman: Well there you have it. Some useful feedback and words from ~MB taken from his AARP customer service problem that occurred on November 18th, 2017.

AARP

4.21 of 5 stars | 107 reviews

~MB's AARP Review

Difficulty of finding help
5 out of 5 stars
Quality of communication
5 out of 5 stars
Timeliness and professionalism
4 out of 5 stars
Overall customer service rating
5 out of 5 stars

GetHuman collects and distributes reviews, how-to-guides, tips, hacks and secret contact information for companies like AARP, sourced by customers like you, to help us all get customer service better, faster and easier. GetHuman is not affiliated with AARP in any way.

Was this page helpful?YesNeeds work
Sharing is what powers GetHuman's free customer service contact information and tools. You can help!