By: David Muellenhoff
Estimated reading time: 6 minutes
As of July 1, 2024, it will be unlawful for California businesses to advertise prices to consumers that do not include all mandatory fees or charges, exclusive of government-imposed taxes or fees such as shipping costs. This could result in some startling retail inflationary effects come July 1. At the least, it will dramatically change how many businesses communicate prices to the public. The California Attorney General recently provided some guidance to help businesses comply with the new law.
California’s Consumer Legal Remedies Act (CLRA) (Civ. Code, §§ 1750–1784) makes it unlawful to engage in certain unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices – such as advertising goods or services to a consumer with the intent not to sell or lease them as advertised. It also provides for private suits by consumers for relief, which can include actual damages ($1,000 minimum in class actions), injunctive relief, restitution, punitive damages, and attorney fees. (Civ. Code, § 1780, subd. (a).) Senior citizens and disabled persons may be awarded additional damages up to $5,000. (Civ. Code, § 1780, subd. (b).)
As CEB covered last October, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed SB 478. The bill was intended to specifically prohibit “drip pricing,” which the bill defined as advertising a price that is less than the actual price the consumer will have to pay for a good or service. (Drip pricing is not to be confused with “drip marketing,” which refers to scheduling a campaign of targeted communications to help move a consumer through marketing and sales funnels.)
SB 478 declared (Stats. 2023, ch. 400, sec. 1(b)) the legislature’s finding that drip pricing, “like other forms of bait and switch advertising,” was already prohibited by existing statutes, including California’s Unfair Competition Law (UCL) (Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 17200–17210) and False Advertising Law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17500). Nevertheless, SB 478 amended the CLRA to, among other things, make it unlawful effective July 1, 2024 to engage in
Advertising, displaying, or offering a price for a good or service that does not include all mandatory fees or charges other than either of the following:
(i) Taxes or fees imposed by a government on the transaction.
(ii) Postage or carriage charges that will be reasonably and actually incurred to ship the physical good to the consumer.
(Civ. Code, § 1770, subd. (a)(29)(A).)
Businesses and their legal counsel had identified a number of practical issues with implementing the new law. Restaurants, in particular, were concerned about such matters as minimum-wage-increase charges, delivery fees, tips, and dynamic (i.e., “surge”) pricing. The Attorney General recently provided helpful guidance in the form of a FAQ.
The FAQ does not, of course, carry the force of law, and counsel should monitor possible litigation on SB 478’s constitutionality, and on its application to restaurant and other specific industry practices. But the FAQ certainly indicates the Attorney General’s interpretation of this provision of the CLRA, and the legal position the Attorney General will take when enforcing it.
This writer believes many businesses that choose to comply with the new law will simply jack up their advertised prices as of July 1 to cover all possible mandatory fees and charges, and then discount the actual price the consumer pays where they can.
For example, are credit card surcharges to defray merchant transaction processing costs for accepting credit card payments (e.g., capped by Visa at 3% and Mastercard at 4%) “mandatory fees or charges” that are required to be included in the advertised price? The FAQ does not say.
If the answer is yes, then how are businesses to implement this, when they will not know until point of sale whether the customer is paying by credit card or cash, and which card network’s fees will apply? At a practical level, to reflect these possible charges in the initial price the consumer sees, businesses may have to raise all posted prices by the maximum surcharge permitted, say 4%, and then offer discounts to the consumer who pays by a less costly card network or by cash.
Would a 4% jump in retail prices on July 1 be reflected in the Consumer Price Index and other inflation metrics? It won’t be long before we may get to find out.
© The Regents of the University of California, 2024.
This article is also accessible on CEB DailyNews platform located at: https://research.ceb.com/posts/applying-section-230-to-facebooks-ad-business-new-case-has-big-implications