The Post

Sneaky fees add millions

- ANUJA NADKARNI

New Zealand consumers could be paying $68 million a year in hidden fees charged by retailers, Consumer NZ says.

Consumer NZ chief executive Sue Chetwin said more than twothirds of consumers have been charged extra fees on top of the advertised price of goods and services.

These charges were often called booking or service fees and were increasing­ly common in the travel and entertainm­ent industries and were misleading customers, she said.

‘‘By the time the add-ons are revealed, consumers are more likely to be committed to the purchase and less likely to shop around.’’

Retail New Zealand spokesman Greg Harford said transparen­cy was not a problem among retailers, but more so with service providers.

Charging credit card fees was a way merchants, typically in the hospitalit­y industry, is to recover bank fees on electronic transactio­ns, he said.

The practice of adding fees to advertised prices is known as ‘‘drip pricing’’, and Chetwin said the Fair Trading Act had not stopped it.

‘‘Other countries provide better consumer protection. In Australia, for example, companies are prohibited from advertisin­g a component of a price without prominentl­y displaying the total amount.’’

Extra fees can add more than $50 to the advertised price. On average, consumers are paying $13 more, the survey revealed.

Consumer NZ has launched a campaign calling for the Fair Trading Act to include rules requiring businesses to disclose the full cost of products upfront.

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