Sometimes, following the rules to the letter is the sweetest revenge. When one employee’s modest $1.50 overage on a dinner claim was denied, they were lectured about company policy and told to “read it properly next time.”
Taking that advice a little too literally, they combed through every line and found a little-known perk that more than made up for the rejected meal. Let’s just say the head office’s attempt to save a buck backfired beautifully.
Overworked employee, rejected for $1.50 meal overage, reads policy and claims $300 per diem for 30 home lunches





















OP edited the post







Sometimes the most satisfying workplace victories come not from defiance but from reading the fine print.
In this case, the Original Poster (OP) tried to claim reimbursement for a modest $1.50 overage on a few dinners, only to be met with corporate indignation and a snarky email urging them to “actually read the company policy.”
So they did. And, buried in that same policy, OP discovered a clause allowing a $10 per diem for meals brought from home, a benefit almost no one in their department even knew existed.
The result? A $300 reimbursement windfall and a poetic reminder that bureaucracy often defeats itself.
What makes this story so satisfying isn’t the small sum, it’s the power dynamics. Corporate systems are often designed around strict compliance rather than employee well-being, leaving staff feeling micromanaged over trivial amounts.
A 2022 Gartner report found that more than 68% of employees experience “policy fatigue”, frustration with hyper-detailed rules that reduce autonomy and waste time.
This fatigue is amplified when management enforces policy selectively, nitpicking minor errors while overlooking beneficial clauses.
Ironically, OP’s experience highlights how rigid enforcement can backfire. By strictly adhering to the rules, they exposed a loophole that benefited them far more than the $1.50 Head Office was so determined to reject.
This aligns with the concept of “malicious compliance,” a form of rule-following used to reveal flaws in a system through its own logic.
Organizational psychologist Dr. Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic describes it as “a quiet assertion of competence”, employees proving that they understand the system better than those who enforce it.
It’s also a lesson in corporate empathy or the lack thereof. Rejecting an employee’s expense claim over $1.50 costs far more in morale and productivity than it saves.
As management consultant Simon Sinek often argues, trust is a two-way street: when companies demonstrate faith in employees’ judgment, loyalty and effort follow naturally.
By contrast, when workers are treated like potential rule-breakers, they learn to treat policies as weapons rather than guidelines.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
These commenters cheered on OP’s clever comeback




Both spoke from an insider’s perspective, explaining that sometimes finance staff have to reject small errors to stay compliant





These users mocked corporate inefficiency, joking about the absurdity of wasting time over $1.50




This commenter poked fun at the per diem loophole


This user shared a similar win





This commenter suggested a kinder interpretation




What started as a petty $1.50 dispute turned into a masterclass in policy literacy. The employee didn’t fight back, they just did what corporate told them to: read.
And reading paid off. In a world where bureaucracy thrives on people not paying attention, knowing your own company’s rules might just be the smartest form of rebellion.
Would you have done the same or just written off the $1.50 and moved on?








