Unveiling the Legalities: Can Hairdressers Charge for Missed Appointments? Featuring Dean Dunham

Is it Legal for My Hairdresser to Charge Me If I Miss an Appointment?

By Dean Dunham | Updated: 02:21 BST, 18 October 2023

I wasn’t able to turn up for my haircut last week, and now my hairdresser is charging me for the missed appointment. Is that legal?

E.M., Manchester.

Dean Dunham replies:

To be able to enforce this, your hairdresser will have to prove that you were informed, prior to or at the time you made the appointment, that you would be charged if you failed to show.

The Consumer Rights Act states that key terms, such as penalty clauses like this, must be made prominent to the consumer, prior to the contract being formed.

This means you either have to be expressly told that you will be charged, or it needs to have been contained in the terms and conditions and brought to your attention.

Cut it out: Is a hairdresser legally permitted to charge a client if they are forced to miss an appointment?

So, if your hairdresser remained silent about this penalty charge pre-booking, they cannot now force you to pay.

If you were informed of the ‘no-show’ penalty at the point of making the appointment, you should ask your hairdresser if they managed to fill your appointment with another customer.

If they did, there has been no loss to them, and in these circumstances, it is unfair to charge you as it will leave your hairdresser over-compensated.

Waiting Nine Weeks for Sofa Delivery

I ordered a new sofa and was told it would be delivered within six weeks. It has now been nine weeks, and still no delivery.

I’ve told the retailer I now want to cancel the order, but the retailer said I’ll lose my deposit if I do.

G.W., Cambridge.

Dean Dunham replies:

It is important first to establish whether the retailer gave you a ‘confirmed’ or ‘definite’ delivery date or if it was an estimate, as the law treats the two scenarios very differently.

If you were given a confirmed date, this would have formed an important part of the contract between you and the retailer, and its failure to deliver on this date will amount to a breach of contract.

The effect of the breach of contract is that you are entitled to cancel the contract/order and demand your deposit back.

Retailers nearly always provide estimated delivery dates when it comes to purchases of furniture.

If this is the case with your sofa order, there will be no breach of contract for the estimated date being missed, as it will not have formed a term in the contract between you. However, that does not mean the retailer can keep giving you new estimated dates forever.

Under the Consumer Rights Act, if goods are not delivered within the estimated timeframe, the default position is that the goods must be delivered within a ‘reasonable amount of time’.

What is reasonable will depend on the particular circumstances. In your case, nine weeks is, in my view, nearing the limit of what will be classified as ‘reasonable’. And if there is still no sign of the sofa by week 12 (double the estimated time), this would clearly not be reasonable. This would leave you, the consumer, in the position of being able to cancel the order and demand a refund of all monies paid.

When the delivery of goods is not made within the time estimate given, my advice is to tell the retailer that you will treat the contract as at an end – if the goods are not delivered by a certain date.

If the retailer says it cannot guarantee the specified date, this gives you the opportunity to say that you cannot reasonably be expected to wait any longer without a definite delivery date.

Then you can cancel the contract and demand your money back.

Write to Dean Dunham, Money Mail, Scottish Daily Mail, 20 Waterloo Street, Glasgow G2 6DB or email [email protected]. No legal responsibility can be accepted by the Daily Mail for answers given.

Share or comment on this article: Some links in this article may be affiliate links. If you click on them, we may earn a small commission. That helps us fund This Is Money and keep it free to use. We do not write articles to promote products. We do not allow any commercial relationship to affect our editorial independence.

Reference

Denial of responsibility! Vigour Times is an automatic aggregator of Global media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, and all materials to their authors. For any complaint, please reach us at – [email protected]. We will take necessary action within 24 hours.
Denial of responsibility! Vigour Times is an automatic aggregator of Global media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, and all materials to their authors. For any complaint, please reach us at – [email protected]. We will take necessary action within 24 hours.
DMCA compliant image

Leave a Comment