Consumer Hacks with Wendy Knowler

Airline damaged your bag? Invoke the Consumer Protection Act

44 s · 22 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Airline damaged your bag? Invoke the Consumer Protection Act

Descripción

Don't let airlines and their baggage handling partners fob you off with a pittance when their baggage handling partners damage your luggage. South African airlines often limit compensation using outdated international conventions, ignoring the Consumer Protection Act's protections. But the CPA entitles you to fair compensation for damaged goods - and that includes your baggage. Document the damage at the airport immediately, photograph everything, and file a written complaint referencing the Consumer Protection Act. Don't accept their first offer; escalate to the airline's complaints department or the Consumer Goods and Services Ombud - and me! - if necessary.

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episode How well do you know your rights as an online shopper? artwork

How well do you know your rights as an online shopper?

Here’s Janet’s question to me: “I bought a pair of trainers on an online sale about 5 days ago. On delivery day I tried on and them to be too tight across my foot. I have been told I can’t return them because they were a sale item. I'm very unhappy about this and would like a full refund from the company. I don't think that this is the way to treat a return customer.” Is she entitled to one? Gold star if you said yes. Thanks to the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act you are legally entitled to return something you bought online with a week of delivery for a refund – regardless of whether they were bought online or not. The only catch is that you have to bear the cost of sending the goods back - unless the retailer chooses to absorb that cost.

Ayer48 s