Robert Besser
30 May 2025, 15:23 GMT+10
DUBLIN, Ireland: Boots Ireland has admitted to breaking pricing laws during a Black Friday sale in 2023, leading to an investigation by the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC).
The company appeared in Dublin District Court this week before Judge Anthony Halpin. The case involved wrongly advertised discounts on electric toothbrushes and perfume.
Under the law, businesses must base any discounts on the lowest price from the previous 30 days and clearly show that price. This rule was not followed in the sale.
The main issue was with Oral-B toothbrushes. Judge Halpin noted that the mistakes were caused by human error, that Boots had no past offenses, and that the company admitted guilt. Because of this, he said Boots could avoid a criminal conviction.
He delayed the final decision until June 26. If Boots pays 4,624 euros for the CCPC's costs and gives 1,000 euros to the Little Flower Penny Dinners charity, he said he would apply the Probation of Offenders Act — meaning Boots would not get a formal conviction.
This was one of the first cases under new pricing laws introduced in 2022.
The CCPC lawyer, Cathal Ó Braonáin, explained that businesses break the law when they offer a discount without showing the correct previous price—which must have been the lowest in the past 30 days.
Boots pleaded guilty to one charge. Two others were dropped, but the court still reviewed all three cases.
CCPC officer David Mulholland reviewed Boots' website on November 17, 2023. He found three violations:
Boots' lawyer, Eoin Mac Aodha, asked the judge to be lenient. He said the errors were unintentional, and the company was sorry. He explained that Boots had over 104,000 products on sale that day, and only a few had issues.
He also said Boots had reviewed and improved its internal systems since then and was willing to pay the charity donation and legal costs.
Judge Halpin said Boots was a well-known and respected company in Ireland. He noted that a senior compliance officer had traveled from the UK to attend the hearing.
The charges fall under EU rules brought in November 2022. Earlier this year, other companies—Lifestyle Sports, DID Electrical, and Rath-Wood Home and Garden—admitted similar offenses. They also paid 1,000 euros to the same charity and covered CCPC costs, so they were acquitted.
After the hearing, CCPC Chairperson Brian McHugh said: "False sale discounts hurt both consumers and fair competition. Customers must be given clear and honest information so they can make good choices."
Get a daily dose of Belgium Sun news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Belgium Sun.
More InformationDUBLIN, Ireland: TikTok is asking the High Court to stop a decision that could block the transfer of user data to China within six...
MADRID, Spain: Europe's tourism sector is poised for a strong 2025, with international visitor spending projected to grow by 11 percent...
BEIJING, China: European companies are spending less and cutting back on investment plans in China because the Chinese economy is slowing...
DUBLIN, Ireland: A nurse from Tipperary has been awarded 72,000 euros by a High Court judge after she slipped and fell on a wet floor...
DUBLIN, Ireland: A Dublin judge has ordered that four XL Bully dogs be put down after one of them escaped from a garden and frightened...
GENEVA, Switzerland: A massive glacier collapse in the Swiss Alps sent a torrent of ice, mud, and rock crashing into the evacuated...
JERUSALEM (CNN) - Palestinians on their way to receive aid from a distribution site in southern Gaza have come under fire for a third...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Tensions reignite in the U.S.-China trade truce after President Donald Trump accused Beijing of violating a recent...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: Facing a deepening financial crisis, the United Nations Secretariat is planning to cut 20 percent of its US$3.7...
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico: More than 4 billion people worldwide endured at least one extra month of extreme heat between May 2024 and May...
GAZA - At least 32 Palestinians were killed and more than 200 wounded after Israeli forces opened fire on crowds waiting for food at...
SEOUL, South Korea: On May 30, South Korea's leading left-wing presidential candidate, Lee Jae-myung, said he wants to change the Constitution...