M&S Delivery Charges
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Annieuk75
Posts: 399 Forumite
I wonder if anyone can help? I buy my son's school uniform from M&S, it is a new pilot scheme this year. The problem I have is that when I purchase the bespoke items (with school badges on) I am unable to have it delivered to store and have to pay a £3.50 delivery charge. Under no circumstances will they offer no delivery charge - I know of 1 Mum who just spent over £50, yet still had to pay the £3.50. I have spoken to everyone, my local manager and the chairmans office, and M&S are still stating that they will continue to make the charges.
I have no choice but to purchase the uniform from M&S, but begrudge paying the charge. Is there anything else that I can do?
Thanks
I have no choice but to purchase the uniform from M&S, but begrudge paying the charge. Is there anything else that I can do?
Thanks
0
Comments
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If you want the item, you pay delivery. It costs them money to send the items to you, so of course they can charge for it.
If you don't want to pay, don't buy the uniforms. If you want them, you have to pay.0 -
Sounds simple mattyprice, but when everything else can be delivered to store for free...it's not really being fair.
I've been trying to push the delivery to school, but M&S aren't happy to do that either.0 -
Why should us store buyers and pickers up from the store subsidise you? If you can't/won't go to the shop then £3.50 does not seem an excessive amount for £50 worth of goods.0
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Really all this over £3.50, quite unbelievable.0
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It might be that M&S don't do the sewing on of the badges themselves, but outsource this to another company instead.
This company might receive the uniforms and badges from M&S, then when the work has been carried out, they may be the ones who send the completed aticles out, and the delivery charge may go to them (even though you pay it to M&S).0 -
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shaun_from_Africa wrote: »And there was me thinking that this was a money saving site.
So what, I think it's a ridiculous amount of time and energy to waste over £3.50.0 -
Why should us store buyers and pickers up from the store subsidise you? If you can't/won't go to the shop then £3.50 does not seem an excessive amount for £50 worth of goods.
If you read more carefully, you'll see that they won't deliver to the store, so there is no option for the OP to go to the store.0 -
Pretty sure that Shaun From Africa is right - if I order any 'personalised' items from M&S (i.e. made to measure shirts) there is no option for store delivery - only the £3.50 charge option.
TBH I'd be taking issue with the school who've forced you down this route rather than M&S0
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