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virgin not honouring agreed contract price.

vivien1102
Joining in

On 28th January I negotiated a new contract price, as my current contract was coming to an end, and was moved from an Ultimate Oomph bundle to  a Volt bundle with the same benefits except I was told that my mobile phone had to be moved to O2 for £25. The rest of the agreed package was £62.75

I received all the paperwork and have saved the What's App conversation where I was told that this was all processed.

Unfortunately this appears to not be the case. The move to O2 went relatively smoothly and from mid February I started paying for this.

Subsequently I have only received requests for £139 for Virgin Media services and on querying this I have been told that the contract price I agreed has not been processed in spite of me having evidence that i was told that it was. And I have been offered a higher price for the services.

 Now they won't honour  the original deal and price. How can this be? How can they process one part and renege on the rest?  A complaint has been raised but I have heard nothing.

Any thoughts on this would be very welcome.

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

Andrew-G
Alessandro Volta

Give the forum staff one chance to sort this out.  If they fail or there's any messing about (or if the goodwill gesture is an insult in VM's trademark range of £5-30) then follow the boilerplate recommendations below:

These "didn't get the deal I agreed" situations happen from time to time - in fact they happen regularly with Virgin Media. However, your legal rights are crystal clear - information provided by a company verbally or written is binding if the consumer relies upon it when entering a contract (Section 50 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015), so VM have to honour whatever was promised, whether they like it or not. No matter what VM say about "not the right deal", "can't offer that to you", "deal not on the system", you agreed a contract with their agent, that is now binding . And perhaps they need to re-train some of their staff because yours is a regular complaint in these forums.

Hopefully the forum staff can pick this up and get it sorted - by which I mean that you get exactly the deal you were promised, suitably backdated to when it should have been effective, and an appropriate goodwill gesture (say £70) for the inconvenience and stress. That would be the cheapest and quickest resolution for both parties, and the best way of trying to recover some goodwill in a bad situation. If they can't get it sorted in that complete manner (and don't settle for miserly goodwill payment), you need read the Virgin Media Complaints Code of Practice and raise a formal complaint. I suggest in writing, by recorded post. Reject the contract they're trying to impose, and demanding that as per your legal rights the company honour what was promised, and pointing out that if the company can't honour its agreement you will escalate to Ombudsman Services as soon as permitted by the rules.

If VM still won't honour the contract despite the complaint, or issue a fob-off resolution that doesn't settle things acceptably, then you reply by rejecting the "resolution" and asking for a deadlock letter, with that you take the matter to the Ombudsman. If VM stall and you can't get a deadlock letter then (ignoring that it is a breach of regulations) then eight weeks after your initial complaint was received by VM you can take the matter to the Ombudsman without a deadlock letter. Explain the background and request that VM be required to give you the promised deal, fully backdated, and add on a request for compensation for the hassle.

See where this Helpful Answer was posted

6 REPLIES 6

Andrew-G
Alessandro Volta

Give the forum staff one chance to sort this out.  If they fail or there's any messing about (or if the goodwill gesture is an insult in VM's trademark range of £5-30) then follow the boilerplate recommendations below:

These "didn't get the deal I agreed" situations happen from time to time - in fact they happen regularly with Virgin Media. However, your legal rights are crystal clear - information provided by a company verbally or written is binding if the consumer relies upon it when entering a contract (Section 50 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015), so VM have to honour whatever was promised, whether they like it or not. No matter what VM say about "not the right deal", "can't offer that to you", "deal not on the system", you agreed a contract with their agent, that is now binding . And perhaps they need to re-train some of their staff because yours is a regular complaint in these forums.

Hopefully the forum staff can pick this up and get it sorted - by which I mean that you get exactly the deal you were promised, suitably backdated to when it should have been effective, and an appropriate goodwill gesture (say £70) for the inconvenience and stress. That would be the cheapest and quickest resolution for both parties, and the best way of trying to recover some goodwill in a bad situation. If they can't get it sorted in that complete manner (and don't settle for miserly goodwill payment), you need read the Virgin Media Complaints Code of Practice and raise a formal complaint. I suggest in writing, by recorded post. Reject the contract they're trying to impose, and demanding that as per your legal rights the company honour what was promised, and pointing out that if the company can't honour its agreement you will escalate to Ombudsman Services as soon as permitted by the rules.

If VM still won't honour the contract despite the complaint, or issue a fob-off resolution that doesn't settle things acceptably, then you reply by rejecting the "resolution" and asking for a deadlock letter, with that you take the matter to the Ombudsman. If VM stall and you can't get a deadlock letter then (ignoring that it is a breach of regulations) then eight weeks after your initial complaint was received by VM you can take the matter to the Ombudsman without a deadlock letter. Explain the background and request that VM be required to give you the promised deal, fully backdated, and add on a request for compensation for the hassle.

Thanks for your insight

Thanks for your post on our Community Forums @vivien1102, and a very warm welcome to you!

Sorry to hear of the issues you've faced with the pricing of the services.

I'd be happy to take a look into this for you.

Check out the purple envelope in the top right hand corner for a private message from me.

Kindest regards,

David_Bn

Travis_M
Forum Team (Retired)
Forum Team (Retired)

Hi @PaulFWarrick 

 

Thanks for posting on our community forum and I am so sorry to hear about the mishap with your package

 

I am going to drop you a private message now to collect some more information and investigate further, keep an eye on your inbox for a message from myself.

 

Regards

Travis_M
Forum Team

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Ken37
Joining in

This exact thing is happening to me except they didn't mention the SIM card and I was never sent one and they're saying my contract was never processed even though I received the contract and have a contract number 😡

Hi Ken37,

Thanks for posting and welcome to our community 😊

We're sorry to hear there's been some confusion with your package. Package changes aren't something we do via this forum, however so I can get a few more details from you I've popped you over a private message.

Alex_Rm