Receipt for pricey porkBNPS

An Asda shopper was charged £527 for two 'reduced price' pork chops, after an error with the self-service tills. She paid up, after forgetting her glasses, and was only refunded four days later.

So how can this happen, and how common is it?

Overcharged

The 57-year-old woman, who wanted to remain anonymous, told the Daily Mail that she'd popped into her local Asda in Poole, Dorset, where she saw the chops on offer. She took them through the self-service checkout, and because she wasn't wearing her reading glasses, she didn't notice that instead of being charged £1 for them - she was billed £525.

When she got home and spotted the mistake, she hurried back for a refund. But although staff put it through immediately, the money didn't make it back into her account for four days - which meant she had to fall back on her overdraft.


An Asda spokesperson said that the banking system was responsible for the delay, and a 'system glitch' for the initial mistake. They added that the woman had received a £5 gift card as a goodwill gesture, and apologised.

Is this unusual?

While a £250 pork chop is going to be a relatively rare occurrence, it reveals the risk that these unmanned tills can make mistakes - and without a real person to intervene, shoppers can be overcharged.

Of course if your shop comes out £500 more expensive than you were expecting, you're likely to notice - but what if it's only a few pennies?

The various shopping and deals forums are packed with anecdotes from eagle-eyed shoppers, who have spotted overcharging. Most of them check their receipts before they leave the shop, and find a catalogue of errors.

Errors

Most commonly reported is where a product is on offer, but they have been charged the full price. Other issues are when the cashier (or the shopper) accidentally scan the same product twice. And those who buy from the discounted shelf - where barcodes are created manually - and find prices are different at the checkout than they were on the shelf.

In some instances, the difference is just a few pence, but there are reports from people who claim to be overcharged at various supermarkets by £1-£3 a month - which adds up.

Of course, for every diligent shopper who takes the time to check their receipt, there are scores who don't have the time, and don't realise there is a risk. So we cannot really know how widespread the problem is.

What can you do?

If you are overcharged, you can take the receipt to customer services, In some instances you will receive an apology and a goodwill gesture, but in the main you will simply get your money back.

It becomes a question, therefore, of whether you have the patience to remember the cost of what you have bought (and the deals) and check the receipt thoroughly while you are in the shop - or whether you shop at supermarkets for the convenience, and this process would render it far too complex to bother with.

What do you think? Let us know in the comments.



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