3 Daim-Barren kosten normalerweise 3,50, der Preis beträgt 3,90 bis 2,50, sodass die Ersparnis bei 1,40 besser aussieht.

    Betrug, dummer Betrug.

    Wo sind die Wachhunde für dieses Zeug?

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    Von EvolvedMonkeyInSpace

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    27 Kommentare

    1. It has to have been priced at 3.90 for at least 30 days under consumer law I believe before you can mark it down and call it a sale. Report it to the CCPC they’re very strict on this stuff

    2. Substantial_Rope8225 on

      They’re at this every week, makes me so irrationally angry!

      What’s the point of having the CCPC

    3. OutInABlazeOfGlory on

      There needs to be stricter regulations on the price of consumer goods in general. Like, anywhere in the world where haggling is not permitted.

      You shouldn’t be able to do a sale and raise the base price at the same time to increase savings. Hell, they should only be allowed to show the price difference from the last price. If it’s because it’s on sale, sure, say that. But they should be required to print on the label “this price has increased by <X amount>”

    4. €3.00 in Tesco, surprisingly not on sale for €2.50 which is what I expected.

    5. Works when the government is bringing out the budget, taxes for alcohol and tobacco go up by about 5% and then the do everyone a favor by bringing it back down but it’s still 50c or 1euro more than the original price…. This shit always happens when there’s an election looming.

    6. SampleDisastrous3311 on

      Wait till you see the simply better housekeeper meat, the dunnstore housekeeper is a cheaper option with the only difference is a fancy lable to boost price,

    7. It’s really not that hard for people to use their own common sense. One is 83c per bar, the other is 1.30 per bar, if you’re happy to pay 83c for a Daim bar that’s great, and if you want to buy them purely because there’s a perceived saving, that’s your own business. Neither case is really that big of a rip-off.

    8. Nearly as bad as the Black Friday sales. Every shop does this to make the consumer think that are making savings.

    9. Few-Ad-6322 on

      You have proof they raised the price inside the 30 day window or is it trust me bro?

    10. Otherwise-Winner9643 on

      Many retailers use misleading prices within legal guidelines.

      I contacted Curry’s because I had been waiting to buy a dishwasher, so I had been looking at prices for a while, but was waiting for the sale. They put up the price of the model I was looking at for the full 30 days before the sale, then lowered it to the „sale“ price, which was the RRP that it was for sale for prior to the 30 day increase. I sent them screenshots, and they sent me back the rules that say it is based on the previous 30 days‘ price, so they were entirely within the law to advertise it as a sale price.

      My takeaway was, do not buy any big ticket items in the 30 days ***before*** a sale, because you will get shafted.

    11. cinderubella on

      They’ll need much more potent marketeering sorcery before I’ll feel remotely intelligent buying chocolate. 2 normal sized bars for more than €3? A 28g daim bar for the guts of €1? 

    12. defjam20000 on

      The price increases in shit „food“ has been the best thing to happen to my health – I’m so disgusted at the price of chocolate I can’t enjoy it anymore – fuck ‚em is a great way to get off coca cola or cadburys. Once you’re off it for a while, it becomes painfully obvious that it’s pure muck.

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