Everybody has a story about that Christmas gift: that one that is so ugly or that you will never want or use. Why not exchange it? Or the expensive electronics that fail to emit a sound? Can you exchange it without a receipt?
Most stores will not give you too much trouble if you want to exchange a Christmas gift, especially if you do it in the week after Christmas. It will be even easier if you go to the store where the gift was bought, and even more so if you have the receipt. But who wants to ask for a receipt for a gift?
The Consumer Protection Act
Section 20 of the Consumer Protection Act gives you the right to return goods and receive a full refund if:
This means that you can return the electronics for another one that works.
According to Section 56, you can exchange goods that are unsafe or defective.
Goods that cannot be returned
You cannot return goods if it is prohibited by public health regulation. You can also not return goods that have been partially or entirely disassembled, physically altered, permanently installed, affixed, attached, joined or added to, blended or combined with, or embedded within, other goods or property.
Exchanges
You can usually only exchange goods if you have an invoice or receipt to prove you bought it. Fortunately, most big stores are happy to exchange goods shortly after Christmas without a receipt, unless it is something that was especially made for you.
If you want the money rather
When you return goods unopened in terms of Section 20, the store must refund you the full price paid for the goods, but the store can deduct a reasonable amount if it is in its original condition and repackaged in the original packaging for:
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