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Chronicle Live
National
Rachel Pugh & Sonia Sharma

Currys Black Friday glitch sees £289 iPads selling for just £4

A pre-Black Friday glitch saw Currys offering £289 iPads for a price of £4 at the checkout.

This happened on Tuesday night as the retailer launched its Black Friday offers - two weeks before the official release date - leaving shoppers in shock.

People managed to bag themselves a 9.7 inch 2018 Apple iPad (32GB) for £285 cheaper than the retail place by adding the code 'FREECASE' at checkout, reports the Manchester Evening News .

Unsurprisingly, the deal quickly caused a storm on social media after word got out.

One Twitter user said: "Half of Blackpool just got an iPad for under a fiver from Curry’s. Someone’s getting sacked in the mornnnn."

Another added: "Got my £4 iPad. Cheers Currys!"

"An iPad for £4 nice one Curry’s," wrote somebody else.

A fourth tweeted: "If Curry's don't send me my iPad I'm getting a divorce."

However, it has not yet been confirmed whether Curry's will honour the price, as some customers are now reporting that their orders have been cancelled.

Black Friday 2019: Everything you need to know

One disappointed shopper said: "Welp my Curry's £4 iPad got cancelled, though my sister's might have arrived, mine was only 15 minutes away from being delivered before it was cancelled."

"Mine was an hour away with 20 stops to go and was cancelled and managed to get returned to depot today," said another disgruntled customer.

"Didn't want that £5 iPad from Currys anyway," wrote somebody else.

Is Currys legally obliged to honour the £4 glitch price?

Despite what many consumers believe, according to Citizens' Advice, if you take an item to the till and are told the price  is a mistake, you don't have the right to buy the item at a lower price.

You can still ask the store to honour the price, but they don't have to.

The same rule applies if you see an item advertised anywhere for a lower price than that on the price tag.

If you've already bought the item, and the shop's sold an item to you for less than they meant to, they're only legally allowed to ask for money back if you'd spoken about price and they ended up charging you much less.

If you realise you've paid more for an item than it was advertised for at the time you can ask the shop to refund the difference.

For more information, you can contact Citizens' Advice .

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