Your right as a consumer is to ask someone who works there for the real price.
ElectricalGear2879 on
0,00
TjStax on
it’s gonna cost 0,001 euros.
isoAntti on
Close to zero.
ā it’s not believable someone sold free productsā
HarryCumpole on
A store does not have an obligation to complete the transaction in spite of any offered price. Self checkout might let you through, however.
Sulamanteri on
If there would be a margin of “this could be a right price” they would have to sell the product to you with that price. But in this case I would say that everyone knows that the price can’t be zero and you are ecspected to inform the store and ask the price.
Kerane on
Not sure, but how is this even possible? Its not digital price, its physical paper so someone knew what they were doing.. š
joseplluissans on
A finn would think “I have to contact an employee to fix this”, not “how can I benefit from this?”.
korkkis on
You are obliged to understand that such a price is an error, and they donāt have to sell it with so low price.
HopeSubstantial on
Law sadly says that consumers must have some reasonability to understand error prices š
ChukyTheGreat on
steal
SamuliK96 on
In Finland common sense is expected from people. If the price presented is an obvious mistake, it’s not binding and one won’t be able to argue they should get it for that price.
TheManWithNoShadow on
I once found a prepared food item with a really low price compared to what it was supposed to be (the price was aroundĀ 30 to 50 cents for 700 grams of food depending on the portion size). The price was printed to the item by a local manufacturer using a false price/kg.Ā
The shop assistant told me, that they have to sell it to me for that price. I was kind and didn’t empty the whole shelf. He then took the remaining ones away to give some feedback to the company involved.
Don’t know about this completely free stuff though.
damnappdoesntwork on
Apparently Finnish law expects you to assume this is an error, but if you’re willing to take it to EU courts you might get your free tuna. Well ‘free’, those procedures don’t come cheap.
Procrastinator_P800 on
Itās an obvious pricing error. Your consumer rights in this case are to pay the actual price of the product.
TomppaTom on
There was the dude that filled up a 1m^3 tank with petrol when he discovered a self service fuel station with the price set to 1 cent per litre (or something ridiculous). The operator of the fuel station said āfair enough, my errorā.
But a store is not obligated to honour a pricing error unless it has been marketed. If the shop said āfree tuna for all customersā, then tried to charge for it, you might have a case. But here,
No.
Royal_Throat_7477 on
You can only buy it if you have 0 money.
paahde on
You have a right to stay silent.
Sawmain on
If you take something for a price it clearly shouldnāt be the shop can charge you for the items at later date Or there at the shop. There are expectations to the rule where the shopkeeper will let you keep it but those are rare.
whatyoumademe on
Your right to stop being so American by exploiting someone else’s honest mistake. š
RoniBoy69 on
If you go to the cash register with a cashier and nicely say that it has a 0⬠price tag and other customers might think that the price is 0⬠and it may cause problems, they will thank you and ask someone to fix it. And if you’re lucky, they will give it to you for free.
Odd_Whereas8471 on
None. Just like you deserve, to be honest.
Infinite-Row-2275 on
Why are people so dumb and poorly educated on topics like this?
AmazingDonkey101 on
As long as you still scan them at the counter you are good to go.
aleksi1337 on
I worked in Lidl and often had customers read into things like this or discounts. They would then yell at me, if the system didnt recognize the sales they made up. I would just not scan the item, fcuk it.
25 commenti
Your right as a consumer is to ask someone who works there for the real price.
0,00
it’s gonna cost 0,001 euros.
Close to zero.
ā it’s not believable someone sold free productsā
A store does not have an obligation to complete the transaction in spite of any offered price. Self checkout might let you through, however.
If there would be a margin of “this could be a right price” they would have to sell the product to you with that price. But in this case I would say that everyone knows that the price can’t be zero and you are ecspected to inform the store and ask the price.
Not sure, but how is this even possible? Its not digital price, its physical paper so someone knew what they were doing.. š
A finn would think “I have to contact an employee to fix this”, not “how can I benefit from this?”.
You are obliged to understand that such a price is an error, and they donāt have to sell it with so low price.
Law sadly says that consumers must have some reasonability to understand error prices š
steal
In Finland common sense is expected from people. If the price presented is an obvious mistake, it’s not binding and one won’t be able to argue they should get it for that price.
I once found a prepared food item with a really low price compared to what it was supposed to be (the price was aroundĀ 30 to 50 cents for 700 grams of food depending on the portion size). The price was printed to the item by a local manufacturer using a false price/kg.Ā
The shop assistant told me, that they have to sell it to me for that price. I was kind and didn’t empty the whole shelf. He then took the remaining ones away to give some feedback to the company involved.
Don’t know about this completely free stuff though.
Apparently Finnish law expects you to assume this is an error, but if you’re willing to take it to EU courts you might get your free tuna. Well ‘free’, those procedures don’t come cheap.
Itās an obvious pricing error. Your consumer rights in this case are to pay the actual price of the product.
There was the dude that filled up a 1m^3 tank with petrol when he discovered a self service fuel station with the price set to 1 cent per litre (or something ridiculous). The operator of the fuel station said āfair enough, my errorā.
But a store is not obligated to honour a pricing error unless it has been marketed. If the shop said āfree tuna for all customersā, then tried to charge for it, you might have a case. But here,
No.
You can only buy it if you have 0 money.
You have a right to stay silent.
If you take something for a price it clearly shouldnāt be the shop can charge you for the items at later date Or there at the shop. There are expectations to the rule where the shopkeeper will let you keep it but those are rare.
Your right to stop being so American by exploiting someone else’s honest mistake. š
If you go to the cash register with a cashier and nicely say that it has a 0⬠price tag and other customers might think that the price is 0⬠and it may cause problems, they will thank you and ask someone to fix it. And if you’re lucky, they will give it to you for free.
None. Just like you deserve, to be honest.
Why are people so dumb and poorly educated on topics like this?
As long as you still scan them at the counter you are good to go.
I worked in Lidl and often had customers read into things like this or discounts. They would then yell at me, if the system didnt recognize the sales they made up. I would just not scan the item, fcuk it.