09-07-2025 5:40 PM
Has anyone else found themselves at odds with a trader who doesn't want to give redress for goods that do not give reasonable durability after purchase. If so have you ever received any help from Ebay? As someone who qualified in Consumer Law, I am looking at whether to begin an action to ensure that Ebay shoppers are not left out of pocket due to the supply of sub standard goods, and less than helpful traders. Ebay appear to make it quite difficult to make contact once a certain timeframe has passed, and actually no law limits a buyers rights to six months and so Ebay should be making more efforts in this direction, to bring their traders into line.
Solved! Go to Solution.
09-07-2025 7:52 PM
There are frequent posts on the buyer forum from people getting no joy from sellers outside of Ebay's money back guarantee period.
You could have a look at those.
09-07-2025 5:46 PM
Ebay MBG is only for 30 days, after that it is between you and seller.
If UK business seller, contact citizens advice.
You are covered by consumer rights, but ebay won't help with those.
09-07-2025 7:18 PM
09-07-2025 7:30 PM
Ebay hide behind their own T&Cs.
As ebay sell nothing, they pass any issues past the 30 days on to seller.
Many have threatened to sue ebay, but I have never known it to happen.
09-07-2025 7:52 PM
There are frequent posts on the buyer forum from people getting no joy from sellers outside of Ebay's money back guarantee period.
You could have a look at those.
09-07-2025 10:13 PM
09-07-2025 10:50 PM
As you can read the law, you will be able to read eBay's user agreement.
This makes it clear that listings are the entire responsibility of the seller. It even warns buyers that "they do not guarantee the existence, quality, safety or legality of items advertised, or the truth or accuracy of descriptions".
At least eBay can't be accused of not explicitly warning buyers that items for sale here may be untruthfully described, unsafe, illegal - or not even exist! And we have all have accepted this - not that anyone reads it, of course.
eBay's own money back guarantee covers most items that don't arrive or are not as described. However, there is a 30 day time limit to claim; when this expires eBay has no further involvement. (Except to pass on product recall info., but with no offer of help.) eBay doesn't even pretend to see that their sellers comply with the requirements of the Consumer Rights Act or anything else. Many are private sellers, or abroad anyway, so consumer rights don't apply or can't be enforced.
Whatever else eBay may do well or badly, they have good lawyers who have produced a user agreement that makes eBay largely bullet proof interms of liability for items sold here, other than it's own, limited money back guarantee. eBay has even structured its organisation in such a way that although its payments procedures are regulated by the FCA, it's money back guarantee is not. So buyers have no right of independent appeal against eBay's (sometimes shocking) decisions. The user agreement even requires users to agree to accept eBay's decisions, putting up another obstacle to potential legal challenge.
The saddest thing is that todays generation of mollycoddled buyers have come to expect that there will always be some-one, somewhere who will protect them. Not on eBay, there won't. eBay is a jungle.
10-07-2025 9:58 AM
10-07-2025 10:16 AM
eBay is just a selling platform, sellers are responsible for their listings.
If the seller at fault is a UK business seller then certainly action could be taken for reasonable durability, but this would be between the buyer and the seller.
10-07-2025 10:47 AM
10-07-2025 11:21 AM
@shopper1*susan wrote:
Thanks, but I thought I made it clear that consumer law is my own expertise. I understand fully the obligations of the seller (and indeed the buyer) but platforms that enable selling also have a responsibility to ensure clarity in their terms and conditions, and this is where Ebay falls down.
It's mine too, and you should understand how a selling platform works. eBay are not supplying and selling items. They are merely a platform, there is no eBay fulfilment same as there is with some online sites.
10-07-2025 11:35 AM
10-07-2025 11:42 AM
@shopper1*susan wrote:
I fully understand how a platform works, and they are subject to the same rules for clarity as any other advertiser - which they are!! I cannot be bothered to waste more time arguing the toss with someone who wants to support selling techniques which do not stand up to scrutiny so please don't bother to reply again.
Don't be rude.
Just because you think you're right doesn't make you right.
Maybe open a discussion thread on what was the Consumer Action Group, now National Consumer Service (first site that comes up and Google) and discuss this there with the legal folk, who are also experts in consumer law.
10-07-2025 1:01 PM
You can argue with ebay all you want,
Your points may be valid, but I doubt you will get anywhere with ebay.
10-07-2025 8:32 PM
10-07-2025 8:34 PM
10-07-2025 9:38 PM
Thank you!! I thought there must be, but not having looked at this community in the past, I wondered about how beneficial it is in comparison with say the Sky Community, where posts can often lead to the resolving of an issue. From the few replies I have had, many seem to be on side with Ebay, rather than wanting an improvement in the way Ebay responds to disgruntled buyers. Makes me wonder who some of the mentors really are!! Many thanks again for the tip
10-07-2025 9:42 PM
@shopper1*susan wrote:
Thanks for the advice. I will do as I see fit though. My not agreeing with you does not make me rude!!
It's all in the way you deliver it, nothing to do with agreeing or disagreeing, points can be presented in an amiable manner. Telling a responder on a public form not to bother to reply again is rude, any way you spin it. I will decide whether to choose to reply, or not. This is not a discussion forum anyway, it's for quick fire answers about buying or selling issues on eBay, hence why I suggested the other forum.
10-07-2025 11:15 PM