on 12-12-2012 13:56
on 12-12-2012 13:56
Can someone please clarify for me.....
I have received an email to say that the tariff i am on will soon increase in cost. I took out a 24-month contract with O2, so am shocked to see that the cost is increasing!! Does this not completely go against the point of having a contract?? All of the terms are clearly stated (i.e. the cost per month, the term, who and when...) and then signed.
Unless someone is about to copy and paste the tiniest piece of smallprint in the world, i think we're all being had!! If O2 can increase is by 50p today, can they increase it by £50 tomorrow??
And, if they can make changes, can i change my contract duration to say, 1 month??
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 02-01-2013 18:33
on 02-01-2013 18:33
You could always report it to Offcom - I'm sure they'd be delighted to fight it for you
@Liquid wrote:
Haha. I try not to:)
I'm just bitter O2 haven't been very forth coming from my credit complaint:D
on 02-01-2013 18:34
on 02-01-2013 18:34
02-01-2013 18:40 - edited 02-01-2013 18:40
02-01-2013 18:40 - edited 02-01-2013 18:40
One more time:
http://www.o2.co.uk/desktop/prices
Check your contract properly.
on 02-01-2013 18:41
on 02-01-2013 18:41
Nice one.... I hadn't seen that
@perksie wrote:One more time:
http://www.o2.co.uk/desktop/prices
Check your contract properly.
on 02-01-2013 18:42
on 02-01-2013 18:42
on 06-01-2013 00:39
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10612209
Price increase (3.2%) in tariff above latest RPI and CPI of 3.0% and 2.7% respectively for the applicable notice date of 11/12/2012. Can somebody explain information from BBC obtained from Office of National Statistics in relation to the price increase at notice date above?
on 06-01-2013 00:53
on 06-01-2013 00:53
http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/cpi/consumer-price-indices/october-2012/index.html
The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) annual inflation stands at 2.7 per cent in October 2012, up from 2.2 per cent in September. The main upward pressure came from the education sector (university tuition fees) with smaller upward contributions from food & non-alcoholic beverages and transport. These were partially offset by downward pressures from the housing & household services, recreation and miscellaneous goods & services sectors. The CPI stands at 124.2 in October 2012 based on 2005=100
The Retail Prices Index (RPI) annual inflation stands at 3.2 per cent in October 2012, up from 2.6 per cent in September. The largest upward pressure came from university tuition fees, followed by food and housing. Fuel & light provided the largest downward pressure. The RPI stands at 245.6 in October 2012 based on January 1987 = 100
on 06-01-2013 00:53
Wow you have found a way out of the price increase.............
There are numerous threads on this and your argument had already been put forward.
I can only suggest you try your theory with O2 and see how you get on.
on 11-03-2013 09:24
on 11-03-2013 09:24
on 11-03-2013 09:27
on 11-03-2013 09:27