Shopper overcharged $197 on her Woolies receipt, but people are calling her out instead…
- Replies 18
One woman has taken to Facebook to rant about how she was charged an additional $197 bucks for items she did not purchase at her local Woolworths. The management at the store has since then apologised to her and refunded her the same amount.
However, after reading her post, many fellow shoppers came to the store’s defence and called out the woman for being in the wrong.
Woolworths overcharged a shopper an additional $197 in her purchase. Credit: AAP.
In a Facebook post, one woman from NSW has warned fellow Woolies shoppers to check their receipts because she just discovered that she was charged a whopping $197 extra for items she did not purchase.
The shopper said the extra items on her receipt were not scanned by the cashier and when she asked the store staff, “nobody could explain” where they came from.
The management at her local Woolworths has since then reached out to her and refunded the same amount unintentionally added to her receipt.
A spokesperson for the supermarket said that incidents like this were highly “unusual” and that shoppers should rest assured this would never happen again. “We take pride in offering our customers a positive experience in our stores and are disappointed that wasn’t the case on this occasion,” they said.
The woman noticed an additional $197 worth of items on her receipt. Credit: Facebook.
But in her Facebook post, the woman added that she was disappointed she never received an additional gift card or incentive from the store to compensate for the error.
“After receiving the refund, which won’t go back into my account straight away, all I got was a sorry,” she said. “Would have been nice to get a gift card or something as I have been a loyal Woolies customer for years with groceries and insurance.”
And this is when the wave of comments from some social media users – heated by the woman’s remarks – started flooding in.
Several people questioned the woman’s “intentions” for sharing the post, and asked her how she could have not noticed right away the massively inflated grocery bill.
“Your fault for not questioning at the time. I think most people would automatically question a $200 hike in their total bill before they left the checkout,” wrote one person. “They apologised and refunded your money. End of transaction.”
“How on earth did you not realise the amount before you paid?! I smell a bid for compo,” said another.
A third even added that the woman “deliberately allowed” the overcharge to happen just so she could receive compensation for the checkout error.
The woman has responded to the backlash. “Well I don’t know about you, but I don’t watch everything scanned but I did notice the total,” she said and added that the cashier, too, should have noticed the marked up price for a relatively few products.
“I was just making people aware that they should check their dockets.”
Good advice! Check your dockets, folks! But what do you think? Was the woman wrong to ask for additional compensation?
Let us know in the comments below!