Consumer Rights Act gives us 6 years to claim for faulty appliances

The Sale of Goods Act has been replaced by The Consumer Rights Act 2015. The new act is designed to, “simplify, strengthen and modernise the law, giving you clearer shopping rights”. So in theory our rights should be even better than with the old Sale of Goods Act. However, some retailers are telling customers that their rights are less if they bought an appliance after the 1st of October 2015.

This implies they believe the new act gives consumers less rights. Consumer group Which? have a form on their site that allows you to compose a faulty goods complaint message to send to a retailer. Part of the form asks if you bought your appliance before, or after October 2015.

This implies there is some difference too. However, it’s possible that the difference is only to determine which legislation to quote to the retailer. I’m currently doing more research, and will keep updating this article as I find more information.


How is the Consumer Rights Act 2015 different?

The main points in the new Consumer Rights Act are that goods must be – of Satisfactory qualityFit for purpose & As described. We also still have up to six years to take a claim to the small claims court for faulty goods in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and five years in Scotland. So it sounds pretty much the same as the old Sale of Goods Act.

The main improvements are that we have additional rights early on after purchase, at below 30 days, and below 6 months (described below). However, there does seem to be at least one potentially negative difference. After 6 months have passed, the onus is now on us to prove that the appliance was faulty when it was delivered.

If your complaint is that after 3 years your appliance has broken down with a fault that has rendered it economically unrepairable, then proving that it was faulty when delivered sounds very difficult. If this was the case, then depending on how much it cost, how much it’s been used and under what conditions, you may still have a valid claim.


Under the old Sale of Goods Act we still had to prove that this was due to a fault when the product was purchased. So nothing should really have changed except potentially the retailer’s interpretations. Here is a quote from consumer group Which? on their old Sale of Goods Act page –

If your claim under the Consumer Rights Act 2015 ends up in a small claims court, you may have to prove that the fault was present when you bought the item and not, for example, something that was the result of normal wear and tear.   ”


This should still be applicable with the 2015 Consumer Rights Act. If for example you bought an appliance for £600, and after 18 months it is scrap because a fault developed unrelated to wear and tear – or misuse – and it was so expensive to repair that it is not worth repairing I would say you have a very valid claim under either the Sale of Goods Act or the Consumer Rights Act.

I would argue that a fault rendering the appliance unrepairable after only 18 months means that the part that failed was not of satisfactory quality and that should be covered by either of the consumer acts.

But what if the appliance had only cost £199? Well maybe 18 months for £199 isn’t so bad if it’s had heavy use? There are no actual rules. It’s what would be considered reasonable with all circumstances considered.

This is subjective. Likewise if an appliance was scrap after 3 years it might still reasonably be considered unacceptable on an appliance that cost £600 – but again, it’s subjective, and may need a small claims court judgement, or help from Which? or another consumer group to fight the case.


One thing is fairly sure, the retailer will almost always say there’s nothing they can do once it is out of the manufacturer’s guarantee. That is not true if you have a valid claim.

Is satisfactory quality still covered?

The consumer group Which? still list, “not of satisfactory quality” as one of the potential complaints in their template complaint letter even if you bought the appliance after October 2015.

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So, combined with the fact that we have up to 6 years to claim in the small claims court (5 in Scotland) this shows we can still claim if an appliance has not lasted a reasonable time due to unsatisfactory quality. Consider becoming a Which? member for full support and information on consumer rights.


Faulty within 30 days?

The Consumer Rights Act 2015 has now given us the right for a full refund if an appliance is faulty, unfit for purpose or not as described within the first 30 days. You must reject the product quickly though, as soon as anything is noticed.

Faulty under 6 months old?

The onus is now on the retailer to prove that a fault on a new appliance within the first 6 months is not an inherent fault. In other words unless they can prove otherwise it will be automatically assumed that your appliance had a fault when it was sold if it fails in the first 6 months.

You should be entitled to compensation or even a refund. Most retailers will still try to fob you off though. Many have a voluntary exchange policy of something like 28 days during which they will swap an appliance over out of “good will” if it fails inside the period. But after that they can be quite stubborn about it.

Any exchange policy is in addition to your rights and nothing to do with consumer rights at all. They might say they can’t exchange a faulty machine after this period, but if it is under 6 months old and has a fault you need to tell them they sold you a faulty product. That is in breach of the Consumer Rights Act.


This is of course assuming there is a genuine fault, and the issue isn’t related to poor installation, failure to use it properly, or misuse. If it’s only a minor fault though it may be more convenient to accept a repair. In fact they can insist on repairing it if they can show it’s disproportionately expensive to replace it. This little caveat can cause a lot of problems because they might argue that’s always the case. Generally though if it was a serious fault they’d probably find it better to swap it.

You should also be entitled to a refund or partial refund if a repair or replacement would cause you significant inconvenience, or if a repair would take an unreasonably long amount of time. This may well be applicable if a repairman looks at the appliance and says he needs to order parts that might take weeks to arrive and be fitted. I would especially argue the significant inconvenience issue if you had a fridge or freezer break down within 6 months and they can not repair it for weeks.

Any reasonable person is likely to argue that being without one of these vital appliances for more than a few days is very inconvenient.

You might argue the same thing if a washing machine can’t be repaired within (say) a week and you have a young baby or large family to wash for. After 6 months though things are different.


There is no 6 year guarantee

We do not have the right to free repairs up to the 5 or 6 years in the sense that any faults up to 6 years should be repaired free of charge, but I do think faults that render an appliance uneconomical to repair within the 6 years should be potentially covered (depending on full circumstances).

It’s not necessarily unreasonable if a fault develops on a washing machine or other white good within the first 5 or 6 years. Appliances can and do break down and this is accepted in the Consumer Rights Act. However, whilst it might be considered reasonable for a fault to develop on a £200 washing machine after 2 years washing for a family of 4 every day it might not be considered reasonable for a washing machine costing £600 to suffer the same – especially if only washing for a retired couple for example.

Major faults occurring within the first 5 or 6 years (which these days commonly render an appliance beyond economical repair) are a different matter though, and I believe many cases may well be covered. If an appliance breaks down and is unrepairable because of the huge cost quoted to repair it within the 5 or 6 years (especially after only 2 or 3) then I believe there is a strong case that the product has definitely not lasted a reasonable time.


You have to take into account how much it cost though, and how much use it’s had. Maybe if a washing machine only cost £200 and did 5 years of heavy washing it could be considered a reasonable lifespan, but one costing £350 and only washing for one person, or a couple, should surely have lasted longer? It’s very much open to interpretation but don’t forget the Consumer Rights Act specifically qualifies the phrase that a product should last a reasonable time by saying “reasonable” is “that (which) a reasonable person would regard as satisfactory”.

A can of worms is waiting to be opened

Until enough people start to fight for these rights and retailers and manufacturers are forced to comply most consumers may have to resort to taking a seller to the small claims court to get a decision on the true extent of their rights ( Small claims court advice ).


If this ever occurs on a large scale it will cause serious ripples. The status quo affords a lot of extra profit to retailers and manufacturers. It effectively encourages them to produce or sell poor quality products. They financially benefit from doing so through extra sales when they don’t last, extra repair business, extra sales of spare parts, and sales of extended warranties.

I’m sure many people take out an extended warranty to protect them from the fear of a major fault developing within the first 5 years, which may well be covered under the Consumer Rights Act. Related: consumers lost over £1bn last year through not using consumer rights | Money Helpline Saves Members Over a million pounds


What would happen if consumers actually received their statutory rights?

Shops going out of business?

I suspect retailers were made responsible for all problems with the products they sell – even when it’s clearly not their fault – for two reasons.

Firstly because the customer only has a contract with the people they bought from – and not the people who made it. They shouldn’t have to negotiate with faceless third parties. Secondly, and I’d like to think this was intended though it’s only speculation on my part, if retailers sell rubbish they (in theory) should suffer financial and time consuming consequences and would either stop selling the rubbish or put pressure on manufacturers to improve quality.

Unfortunately retailers do sell a lot of poor quality products that don’t last anywhere near as long as they should, and of course manufacturers continue to make them. Because most consumers don’t enforce their consumer rights both manufacturers and retailers generally profit nicely from sub standard quality and have little incentive to produce or sell better quality products.


Consumers take most of the impact of poor quality goods themselves by paying out extra for extended warranties or by replacing products far too often, or by paying out to repair products within the first 6 years when the retailer may well be liable.

Most manufacturers (of appliances at least) own so many brands they don’t even fear people being so dissatisfied with a brand that they don’t buy it again because they own many of the “alternative” brands. ( Who owns who? Who really makes your appliance? )

If consumers en mass started to reject the status quo it would put the cat amongst the pigeons and cause a lot of trouble for retailers and manufacturers. Retailers in particular wouldn’t know what had hit them. In the end they’d have to stop selling rubbish because they could no longer profit from doing so. They would only be able to survive selling products that were good enough to last the “reasonable time” expected.


I wouldn’t try to say that most appliances are so rubbish that the majority of them don’t last (although some might), but there’s little doubt that an unacceptable percentage of white goods appliances do suffer expensive breakdowns well within the first 5 or 6 years and this current situation, which is bad for the environment as well as consumers, is only viable because it’s the consumer that bears most of the financial costs. If the consumer refused to accept this burden it would pass back to the retailer as the Consumer Rights Act intended and guess what – the retailers would ensure products they sold were more reliable.

Would we be better off?

Would we better or worse off?

This paragraph is a little tongue in cheek but believe it or not I would worry about how all this could impact the economy especially in these very tough times for retailers.


If there’s one thing I’ve learnt from the “credit crunch” it’s that our economy seems to be based almost entirely on everyone buying lots of products they do not need, and replacing them way too regularly. As soon as we enter a time when people stop buying things they don’t really need we have mass unemployment and business’s struggle. So if all products were much more reliable it could have a big impact on sales and jobs.

It would however be better environmentally and that’s pretty important at the moment. The cost of products would have to go up because you can’t have very cheap and very reliable. It’s ironic that in a way, all these shoddy goods help keep our economy going. However, the same could be said for crime and vandalism, think how many jobs would be lost if there was no crime – seriously it would be millions.

There’s no need for every product to be high quality and there’s plenty of room for a healthy variance in quality but products should still last a “reasonable” time and most people would think a white goods appliance lasting less than 5 or 6 years before a major fault renders it not worth repairing is not reasonable in most circumstances.


Fair wear and tear clause

A vital point to realise is that the Sale of Goods act and the Consumer Rights Act in the UK giving rights to compensation for between 5 and 6 years is not a guarantee or warranty. There has always been a fair wear and tear clause. It has always said that it does not mean that no breakdowns at all should occur within this period –

Goods cannot always be expected to work fault-free. They can break down through normal use. Buyers cannot, therefore, expect to hold the seller responsible for fair wear and tear. There needs to be a fault that was present on the day of sale even though it only became apparent later on, or a mis-description of the goods, or a lack of durability that suggests the goods were not of satisfactory quality to start with.  ”


Research further

Related articles Last year I spent a few weeks researching consumer rights and wrote an entire section focusing on consumer rights for washing machine owners though most of the advice should be equally relevant for most appliances and even other products.

Many manufacturers give 2 year guarantees (such as Bosch) and even 5 year parts and labour guarantees such as Miele or 10 year guarantees (ISE10 and occasionally Miele). The longer the guarantee period the better. However, any guarantee given by a retailer or a manufacturer, as the famous phrase says, “is in addition to your statutory rights”.

The Consumer Rights Act is a separate right which often needs fighting for and is shrouded in mystery, confusion and denial as well as (to be fair) often over inflated expectations from consumers.

Here’s why being out of guarantee is often irrelevant

My article here gives examples of how even years out of guarantee we may still have rights – Out of guarantee doesn’t always mean you have to pay out


Related Consumer Links –

I’ve read all the consumer advice about washing machines, I’m thinking of taking them to court (This page contains a link which allows you to pursue a small claim online, without even having to leave home. The article is about washing machines but the link can be used to pursue any small claims court action)

My Consumer advice section.

The above link includes many links to consumer booklets and guides as well as looking at many related FAQs regarding white goods and repairs. One of the most useful guides available is written for retailers. This is a valuable guide for retailers, but as consumers it is very useful to see what retailers are being told are their responsibilities by the Department of Trade & Industry.

Five consumer laws you really ought to know. There are several references to washing machines and white goods in the article and the comments below it.


How The Consumer Rights Act leaves manufacturers with little or no consequences for making rubbish

Making only retailers responsible for poor quality products has major downsides. Everything I’ve read about consumer rights cases, and all of my personal experiences, have shown that the big retail companies usually deliberately stall us. They keep information from us and mislead us (proven by Which? research). They even keep their front line staff in the dark about our rights so that they genuinely believe we have no rights, and sound convincing when they fob us off. They realise most people will give up so they play the numbers game. They disingenuously refuse to help us when we have bought products that have been of very poor quality, have not lasted a reasonable time, or have had design faults and inherent faults.

They refuse to give refunds or replacements even when we quote our Consumer Rights or threaten to take them to the small claims court. They know this method weeds out most people. I’m not talking about when customers make unreasonable demands, which does happen, but when we have clear and obvious claims. If you have a genuine claim the chances are very remote that the retailer will admit it. Unless you make a serious fuss they have nothing to loose by stalling you until they get official small claims court papers through. Then they will likely pay up.

In my opinion the system does not work well at all. The retailers are not to blame for shoddy goods, yet they have to suffer losses of time and money sometimes years after selling a product and they presumably do not agree with it. Maybe this is why – Is the Consumer Rights Act 2015 too hard on retailers?.

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266 thoughts on “Consumer Rights Act gives us 6 years to claim for faulty appliances”

  1. Hello Louis: I don’t generally rate extended warranties and have an article on them here – Extended warranties – what you need to know

    You aren’t the first person to ask about Miele extended warranties too, I have this article you might be interested in – Should I take out this (Miele) 5 year extended warranty?

    Regarding buying a Miele and it breaking down after 7 years it would depend entirely on how much it had been used, how it had been used, and what had gone wrong. Neither the Sale of Goods Act or Miele claim an appliance should never break down. If it was a reasonable cost to repair it might be considered normal for a 7 year old washer (even a high quality one) to need some maintenance or repair. But if it was going to cost so much that it wasn’t far off the cost of a new one I would definitely argue it hadn’t lasted anywhere near as long as it should have done for the cost, the high quality reputation of the brand and the manufacturer’s claim it was built to last 20 years.

    1. Thanks for the advice.

      If I bought a Miele i think i’d take the £149 extended warranty (equivalent to £30 a year !) which is cheap by extended warranty standards.

      On the other hand considering a samsung washer dryer at costco, samsung confirmed its eligible for a 5 year warranty, costco give it 3 years. But employee at costco confirmed if it breaks after the warranty expires as long as its under 10 years you can return it for a refund ! They won’t arrange a repair

      I’ve never returned something “well used” before I’ve read people take advantage of costco’s return policy like returning half eaten birthday cake ! It would be hassle to return it i suppose but hiring a courrier would be cheaper than paying out on extended warranty i suppose.

  2. “Whitegoodshelp (Andy Trigg) says:
    June 26, 2013 at 12:21 pm
    Many thanks for the update S, it’s so much more useful when people update on events. If the cost of repair is £260 on a product costing £750 after 3 years that’s very disappointing. It’s roughly 35% of the purchasing price. If it was a car costing £9,000 and needed £3,150 spending on it at 3 years it’d be a hell of a shock, but if it was a radio costing £50 which needed £17.50 spending on it, it wouldn’t seem so bad. Everything’s relative and things can seem different according to purchase costs. Your case seems a little in the middle. I don’t know if they have any formulas to work on at the small claims court or not but if it broke down straight after I would think you have a strong claim to reject the repair go back to the retailer saying it hasn’t lasted a reasonable time for what it cost and Bosch haven’t repaired it properly.”

    Another quick update re the above…

    The microwave has now had 3 goes at being repaired with the final conclusion being that it was ‘leaking microwaves’.

    Bosch have dithered a fair bit (the quality of their emails and admin is appalling) but they have now offered to replace the faulty microwave with the exact same model for £265. The replacement is new and will come with a 2 year warranty. The only condition is that I have to give them the old one back.

    The question is whether this is reasonable.

    The model has been around a while and is out of stock most places. A typical retail price for those that still sell it is around the £600-700 mark so I’d be paying about 40% of the new price to replace it.

    What do you think?

    Thanks,

    S.

  3. Hello S: If you were to take them to the small claims court (the seller – not Bosch) and won, you’d be likely the get the repair done free. If as it seems they are unable to repair it, that should strengthen your chances of winning because you’d be saying, I paid £750 for this high quality microwave and after 3 years it’s scrap. Any judgement would take into account you’ve had 3 years of use though, so if for example they believe the average life expectancy is 7 years you’d be entitled to the cost of a replacement minus the value of 3 years which would roughly be the situation you have now.

    There are all sorts of variable and unknowns such as how long the “average” life expectancy of the appliance actually is. Ultimately any Sale of Goods Act responsibility is only on the seller and the manufacturer has none. They are acting purely to try and retain a customer (although clearly not too well).

  4. Hi I wonder id anyone could assist me or advise me. we purchased a Samsung t.v. took out three years guarantee it run out on the 31/7/13 and yes it is now broke 5 weeks after it has expired. I have looked on Google and it seems to be a common problem that you get a white screen but still sound on the t.v its not used much as its in the dinning room but to me it still a new TV as our last TV lasted 15 years. I am unsure how I stand legal can anyone guide me in the right direction.

  5. I would think a Samsung TV should last longer than 3 years but it depends on what fault has occurred as to whether it’s something worth pursuing. If for example it can be fixed for a reasonable amount it might not be considered too out of the ordinary for a product to need a repair. But if it’s a serious fault which is very costly to fix, or even not worth repairing you can argue (with the retailer) that it hasn’t lasted a reasonable time.

    Sadly it’s unrealistic to expect modern TVs to last 15 years but they ought to last at least half that. Another angle could be if you find it’s a very common problem, which might indicate it is a design fault or “inherent” fault, which would mean it was faulty when sold and entitle you to compensation (usually a free repair).

    1. Thanks Andy I have called them this afternoon and waiting for a call back tomorrow and i have looked on Google and seems to be a common fault.

  6. Hi Washerhelp, I bought a Samsung Ecobubble (WF80F5E2W) for £439.99 on the 1st December 2013 from Currys. It broke down on Sunday 19th January after 7 weeks. I had left it running whilst I went to do the shopping and when I returned, there was a burning smell coming from the washing machine. On the Monday I went to Currys to see what the could do and they said because the washer had broken down after the first month I had to deal directly with Samsung.

    I spoke to Samsung and they arranged for an engineer to come out and provide a report. The engineer finally came out on the Friday and found that the motor was jamming and required replacing. I told the engineer that I would not want the part replacing and this was put on the report. Samsung called me back later that evening and stated that they could only offer a repair, I again refused to accept and they basically said that there was nothing more that they can do and I would have to deal directly with the retailer. I went back to Currys as soon as I put down the phone and spoke to customer service.

    They called head office who basically said that the final decision was with the store, but from the head office point of view they would normally take the lead from the manufacturer. After the phone call, the customer services assistant called his manager and the manager stated that by following store policy he would not be able to provide a replacement and that I would need to speak to Samsung for the repair. Failing that I would need to write a letter to Currys head office and take it up with them. I am in the process of writing a letter, but was just wondering if you could offer any advice. Is it worth pursuing this, or should I just accept the repair? I’m reluctant to accept the repair as I feel that the machine should have lasted for more than 7 weeks.

  7. Hello Rebekah. Your case highlights how difficult it is, not only to deal with these issues – but to even be 100% certain of our rights and exactly who to pursue. Currys clearly operate a good will policy of exchanging products that go faulty within the first month (as do some other large retailers). This is something they don’t have to do and it must cost them a lot of money replacing products for what are often minor faults which they would be within their rights to repair.

    Presumably this makes them very reluctant to exchange things after the one month but they still have to operate by consumer law.

    A motor failing after 7 weeks is fairly major, it’s a major part. Under the Sale of goods act if an appliance breaks down within the first 6 months it is now assumed that it had an inherent fault unless the retailer can prove otherwise (after 6 months it’s up to the customer to prove it). This means that in UK consumer law, they sold you a faulty appliance which is a breach of the sale of goods act and are entitled to entitled to compensation or even a refund.

    The difficulty is that if a retailer can show it is “disproportionately expensive to exchange rather than repair” they can insist on a repair but at the same time consumers are supposed to have a right to reject a product with an inherent fault. There are a few conflicting things within the SOGA.

    Currys are right to insist an engineer looks at a faulty appliance before agreeing to exchange it as for all they know it could be faulty because of a user fault (more common than you might imagine on washing machines especially) and Samsung are right in saying all they can offer is to repair it. Under the SOGA the manufacturer only has to honour the guarantee. If it has an inherent or even bad design fault – despite the fact that they  made it only the retailer is responsible because you bought it from the retailer and your contract is with them – plus they have your money.

    Where Currys are on less firm ground though is in saying that because it failed outside the first month you have no rights, because under the SOGA it is accepted by default (unless they can prove otherwise) that when they sold it to you it had an inherent fault because it failed within 6 months.

    Here’s a quote from my article above which is advice given to retailers on how to comply with the sale of goods act –

    If faulty goods are involved and the purchase was made a reasonably short time ago, you should offer a refund. Although they won’t usually do so, the customer may claim compensation from you, either immediately following the sale or up to six years afterwards.

    Sadly, the phrase, “a reasonably short time ago” is open to different interpretations and even abuse. I would have though 7 weeks is a reasonably short time ago but Currys may well interpret it as 1 month is a reasonably short time only.

    If you want a refund, or replacement you need to tell Currys that under the sale of goods act you were sold a faulty appliance, because it has broken down with a serious fault under 6 months the SOGA accepts it had an inherent fault when sold and you are entitled to compensation. If that doesn’t work and you want to pursue it you need to take advice from somewhere like citizens advice or take advantage of the great Which? trial offer to be able to use their advice and even telephone their consumer helpline.

    Please let us know what happens either way.

  8. My Hotpoint fridge started overheating recently after only 6months and there seems to be some sort of oil or grease on the floor underneath. The retailer advised me to ring the manufacturer as it was still under their guarantee. I did this and was given a date for an engineer to call 4days ahead. I was also talked into taking out an extended warranty for 2years at £3 per month .
    After finding your website I’m now wondering if I’ve been a bit hasty.

  9. Hi Andy,

    I wrote the letter to Currys following the disappointment in store and then called head office on Tuesday 28th Jan to confirm the address that I should send the letter. Instead of giving me the address I was asked to detail the problem and was then issued a customer complaint number. The customer services rep told me that my problem could have been dealt with in store and that she would deal with the store on my behalf and call me back by close of business. I never received a call back so called back the following day. Although I had had no call back, the notes against my complaint had been updated and I was told that I would get a call back by the close of business.

    This continued until Friday. When I called head office on Friday evening, the customer services rep read all the updated notes and said he couldn’t understand why the case was still open as approval to exchange the washing machine had been granted the day before. He advised that someone from the local Currys store would call me the following day to arrange the exchange. I was called by store the next day and was advised by the store rep that they would need to call Samsung to authorise the exchange. When he called back he advised that an exchange would not be possible as Samsung were only prepared to offer a repair! I advised the store rep to read through the complaint notes and speak to head office. I received a call later that evening advising that the exchange was approved and that I could request the same machine or go into store to choose another model.

    I went into store on the Sunday and selected a different model (Hotpoint WMUD963P). It was finally delivered on Friday 7th Feb. I’m really glad that I pursued this. Initially I did not know my rights and was almost accepted the repair as I didn’t realise that there were other options to explore. Thanks for all your help.

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