Your Core Rights Under CRA 2015
1. Goods quality: What you buy must be: of satisfactory quality (fit for purpose, safe, durable), as described (matches photos/listing), and fit for any specific purpose you told them about. Lasts for a "reasonable" time (years, not weeks, for most items).
2. Services quality: Services must be: performed with reasonable skill and care, within a reasonable time, at a reasonable price (unless agreed). Examples: plumbing, hairdressing, repairs.
3. Right to reject/refund: Within 30 days of purchase, you can reject faulty goods and get a full refund (no questions). After 30 days, you can still claim repair/replacement or refund, but the burden shifts slightly to you.
4. Unfair contract terms: Terms that heavily favour the business (hidden charges, warranty exclusions, one-sided cancellation) are void. You can challenge them.
5. Anti-scam protection: No aggressive sales tactics, no misleading marketing, no pressure selling. If you're misled, you have the right to reject and claim compensation.
What Can You Do If Rights Are Breached?
File a complaint with the business. If unresolved, escalate to: Ombudsman (financial/services), Trading Standards (goods), or small claims court. The CRA backs all these routes with binding legal force.