FTC GUIDES AGAINST DECEPTIVE PRICING
Sec 233.1 233.2 233.3
233.4 233.5 |
Former price comparisons.
Retail price comparisons; comparable value comparisons.
Advertising retail prices which have been established or suggested by manufacturers (or
other nonretail distributors).
Bargain offers based upon the purchase of other merchandise.
Miscellaneous price comparisons. |
Authority: Secs. 5, 6, 38 Stat. 719, as amended, 721; 15 U.S.C. 45, 46.
Source: 32 FR 15534, Nov. 8, 1967, unless otherwise noted.
§233.1 Former price comparisons.
(a) One of the most commonly used forms of bargain advertising is to offer a reduction
from the advertiser's own former price for an article. If the former price is the actual,
bona fide price at which the article was offered to the public on a regular basis for a
reasonably substantial period of time, it provides a legitimate basis for the advertising
of a price comparison. Where the former price is genuine, the bargain being advertised is
a true one. If, on the other hand, the former price being advertised is not bona fide but
fictitious -- for example, where an artificial, inflated price was established for the
purpose of enabling the subsequent offer of a large reduction -- the ``bargain'' being
advertised is a false one; the purchaser is not receiving the unusual value he expects. In
such a case, the "reduced" price is, in reality, probably just the seller's regular
price.
(b) A former price is not necessarily fictitious merely because no sales at the
advertised price were made. The advertiser should be especially careful, however, in such
a case, that the price is one at which the product was openly and actively offered for
sale, for a reasonably substantial period of time, in the recent, regular course of his
business, honestly and in good faith -- and, of course, not for the purpose of
establishing a fictitious higher price on which a deceptive comparison might be based. And
the advertiser should scrupulously avoid any implication that a former price is a selling,
not an asking price (for example, by use of such language as, ``Formerly sold at $XXX''),
unless substantial sales at that price were actually made.
(c) The following is an example of a price comparison based on a fictitious former
price. John Doe is a retailer of Brand X fountain pens, which cost him $5 each. His usual
markup is 50 percent over cost; that is, his regular retail price is $7.50. In order
subsequently to offer an unusual ``bargain'', Doe begins offering Brand X at $10 per pen.
He realizes that he will be able to sell no, or very few, pens at this inflated price. But
he doesn't care, for he maintains that price for only a few days. Then he ``cuts'' the
price to its usual level -- $7.50 -- and advertises: ``Terrific Bargain: X Pens, Were $10,
Now Only $7.50!'' This is obviously a false claim. The advertised ``bargain'' is not
genuine.
(d) Other illustrations of fictitious price comparisons could be given. An advertiser
might use a price at which he never offered the article at all; he might feature a price
which was not used in the regular course of business, or which was not used in the recent
past but at some remote period in the past, without making disclosure of that fact; he
might use a price that was not openly offered to the public, or that was not maintained
for a reasonable length of time, but was immediately reduced.
(e) If the former price is set forth in the advertisement, whether accompanied or not
by descriptive terminology such as ``Regularly,'' ``Usually,'' ``Formerly,'' etc., the
advertiser should make certain that the former price is not a fictitious one. If the
former price, or the amount or percentage of reduction, is not stated in the
advertisement, as when the ad merely states, ``Sale,'' the advertiser must take care that
the amount of reduction is not so insignificant as to be meaningless. It should be
sufficiently large that the consumer, if he knew what it was, would believe that a genuine
bargain or saving was being offered. An advertiser who claims that an item has been
``Reduced to $9.99,'' when the former price was $10, is misleading the consumer, who will
understand the claim to mean that a much greater, and not merely nominal, reduction was
being offered. [Guide I]
§233.2 Retail price comparisons; comparable value comparisons.
(a) Another commonly used form of bargain advertising is to offer goods at prices lower
than those being charged by others for the same merchandise in the advertiser's trade area
(the area in which he does business). This may be done either on a temporary or a
permanent basis, but in either case the advertised higher price must be based upon fact,
and not be fictitious or misleading. Whenever an advertiser represents that he is selling
below the prices being charged in his area for a particular article, he should be
reasonably certain that the higher price he advertises does not appreciably exceed the
price at which substantial sales of the article are being made in the area -- that is, a
sufficient number of sales so that a consumer would consider a reduction from the price to
represent a genuine bargain or saving. Expressed another way, if a number of the principal
retail outlets in the area are regularly selling Brand X fountain pens at $10, it is not
dishonest for retailer Doe to advertise: ``Brand X Pens, Price Elsewhere $10, Our Price
$7.50''.
(b) The following example, however, illustrates a misleading use of this advertising
technique. Retailer Doe advertises Brand X pens as having a ``Retail Value $15.00, My
Price $7.50,'' when the fact is that only a few small suburban outlets in the area charge
$15. All of the larger outlets located in and around the main shopping areas charge $7.50,
or slightly more or less. The advertisement here would be deceptive, since the price
charged by the small suburban outlets would have no real significance to Doe's customers,
to whom the advertisement of ``Retail Value $15.00'' would suggest a prevailing, and not
merely an isolated and unrepresentative, price in the area in which they shop.
(c) A closely related form of bargain advertising is to offer a reduction from the
prices being charged either by the advertiser or by others in the advertiser's trade area
for other merchandise of like grade and quality -- in other words, comparable or competing
merchandise -- to that being advertised. Such advertising can serve a useful and
legitimate purpose when it is made clear to the consumer that a comparison is being made
with other merchandise and the other merchandise is, in fact, of essentially similar
quality and obtainable in the area. The advertiser should, however, be reasonably certain,
just as in the case of comparisons involving the same merchandise, that the price
advertised as being the price of comparable merchandise does not exceed the price at which
such merchandise is being offered by representative retail outlets in the area. For
example, retailer Doe advertises Brand X pen as having ``Comparable Value $15.00''. Unless
a reasonable number of the principal outlets in the area are offering Brand Y, an
essentially similar pen, for that price, this advertisement would be deceptive. [Guide II]
§233.3 Advertising retail prices which have been established or suggested by
manufacturers (or other nonretail distributors).
(a) Many members of the purchasing public believe that a manufacturer's list price, or
suggested retail price, is the price at which an article is generally sold. Therefore, if
a reduction from this price is advertised, many people will believe that they are being
offered a genuine bargain. To the extent that list or suggested retail prices do not in
fact correspond to prices at which a substantial number of sales of the article in
question are made, the advertisement of a reduction may mislead the consumer.
(b) There are many methods by which manufacturers' suggested retail or list prices are
advertised: Large scale (often nationwide) mass-media advertising by the manufacturer
himself; preticketing by the manufacturer; direct mail advertising; distribution of
promotional material or price lists designed for display to the public. The mechanics used
are not of the essence. This part is concerned with any means employed for placing such
prices before the consuming public.
(c) There would be little problem of deception in this area if all products were
invariably sold at the retail price set by the manufacturer. However, the widespread
failure to observe manufacturers' suggested or list prices, and the advent of retail
discounting on a wide scale, have seriously undermined the dependability of list prices as
indicators of the exact prices at which articles are in fact generally sold at retail.
Changing competitive conditions have created a more acute problem of deception than may
have existed previously. Today, only in the rare case are all sales of an article at the
manufacturer's suggested retail or list price.
(d) But this does not mean that all list prices are fictitious and all offers of
reductions from list, therefore, deceptive. Typically, a list price is a price at which
articles are sold, if not everywhere, then at least in the principal retail outlets which
do not conduct their business on a discount basis. It will not be deemed fictitious if it
is the price at which substantial (that is, not isolated or insignificant) sales are made
in the advertiser's trade area (the area in which he does business). Conversely, if the
list price is significantly in excess of the highest price at which substantial sales in
the trade area are made, there is a clear and serious danger of the consumer being misled
by an advertised reduction from this price.
(e) This general principle applies whether the advertiser is a national or regional
manufacturer (or other non-retail distributor), a mail-order or catalog distributor who
deals directly with the consuming public, or a local retailer. But certain differences in
the responsibility of these various types of businessmen should be noted. A retailer
competing in a local area has at least a general knowledge of the prices being charged in
his area. Therefore, before advertising a manufacturer's list price as a basis for
comparison with his own lower price, the retailer should ascertain whether the list price
is in fact the price regularly charged by principal outlets in his area.
(f) In other words, a retailer who advertises a manufacturer's or distributor's
suggested retail price should be careful to avoid creating a false impression that he is
offering a reduction from the price at which the product is generally sold in his trade
area. If a number of the principal retail outlets in the area are regularly engaged in
making sales at the manufacturer's suggested price, that price may be used in advertising
by one who is selling at a lower price. If, however, the list price is being followed only
by, for example, small suburban stores, house-to-house canvassers, and credit houses,
accounting for only an insubstantial volume of sales in the area, advertising of the list
price would be deceptive.
(g) On the other hand, a manufacturer or other distributor who does business on a large
regional or national scale cannot be required to police or investigate in detail the
prevailing prices of his articles throughout so large a trade area. If he advertises or
disseminates a list or preticketed price in good faith (i.e., as an honest estimate of the
actual retail price) which does not appreciably exceed the highest price at which
substantial sales are made in his trade area, he will not be chargeable with having
engaged in a deceptive practice. Consider the following example:
(h) Manufacturer Roe, who makes Brand X pens and sells them throughout the United
States, advertises his pen in a national magazine as having a ``Suggested Retail Price
$10,'' a price determined on the basis of a market survey. In a substantial number of
representative communities, the principal retail outlets are selling the product at this
price in the regular course of business and in substantial volume. Roe would not be
considered to have advertised a fictitious ``suggested retail price.'' If retailer Doe
does business in one of these communities, he would not be guilty of a deceptive practice
by advertising, ``Brand X Pens, Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price, $10, Our Price,
$7.50.''
(i) It bears repeating that the manufacturer, distributor or retailer must in every
case act honestly and in good faith in advertising a list price, and not with the
intention of establishing a basis, or creating an instrumentality, for a deceptive
comparison in any local or other trade area. For instance, a manufacturer may not affix
price tickets containing inflated prices as an accommodation to particular retailers who
intend to use such prices as the basis for advertising fictitious price reductions. [Guide
III]
§233.4 Bargain offers based upon the purchase of other merchandise.
(a) Frequently, advertisers choose to offer bargains in the form of additional
merchandise to be given a customer on the condition that he purchase a particular article
at the price usually offered by the advertiser. The forms which such offers may take are
numerous and varied, yet all have essentially the same purpose and effect. Representative
of the language frequently employed in such offers are ``Free,'' ``Buy One -- Get One
Free,'' ``2-For-1 Sale,'' ``Half Price Sale,'' ``1 Sale,'' ``50% Off,'' etc. Literally, of
course, the seller is not offering anything ``free'' (i.e., an unconditional gift), or
\1/2\ free, or for only 1, when he makes such an offer, since the purchaser is required to
purchase an article in order to receive the ``free'' or ``1'' item. It is important,
therefore, that where such a form of offer is used, care be taken not to mislead the
consumer.
(b) Where the seller, in making such an offer, increases his regular price of the
article required to be bought, or decreases the quantity and quality of that article, or
otherwise attaches strings (other than the basic condition that the article be purchased
in order for the purchaser to be entitled to the ``free'' or ``1'' additional merchandise)
to the offer, the consumer may be deceived.
(c) Accordingly, whenever a ``free,'' ``2-for-1,'' ``half price sale,'' ``1 sale,''
``50% off'' or similar type of offer is made, all the terms and conditions of the offer
should be made clear at the outset. [Guide IV]
§233.5 Miscellaneous price comparisons.
The practices covered in the provisions set forth above represent the most frequently
employed forms of bargain advertising. However, there are many variations which appear
from time to time and which are, in the main, controlled by the same general principles.
For example, retailers should not advertise a retail price as a ``wholesale'' price. They
should not represent that they are selling at ``factory'' prices when they are not selling
at the prices paid by those purchasing directly from the manufacturer. They should not
offer seconds or imperfect or irregular merchandise at a reduced price without disclosing
that the higher comparative price refers to the price of the merchandise if perfect. They
should not offer an advance sale under circumstances where they do not in good faith
expect to increase the price at a later date, or make a ``limited'' offer which, in fact,
is not limited. In all of these situations, as well as in others too numerous to mention,
advertisers should make certain that the bargain offer is genuine and truthful. Doing so
will serve their own interest as well as that of the public. [Guide V] |