18 Feb 2023 05:59 PM
I renewed my contract in December and as a pensioner told them i couldnt pay any more than £50 a month, i was paying £47.50, i finally agreed to £48.50 as long as i didnt get the price rise that was to come, i now find that my bill will go up by £7 in April taking it to £55.50, more than i agreed to, ive called them and they promised to call back and havent.
I am guessing i am too late to pull out but an extra £84 a year isnt what i agreed to. Any suggestions as to what i can do.
18 Feb 2023 06:05 PM - last edited: 18 Feb 2023 06:08 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@lesleylee54 wrote:
i finally agreed to £48.50 as long as i didnt get the price rise that was to come
It doesn't work like that. Everyone will be subject to the annual price increase (April for UK). No one could agree with you that they wouldn't affect you. The terms and conditions you agreed to at renewal allow for the price increase. Sky can increase prices once in any 12 month period, your contract is not a fixed price the discounts are.
18 Feb 2023 06:04 PM
My email came today and its already on my app in future bills, mine will go up by £7.
18 Feb 2023 06:05 PM - last edited: 18 Feb 2023 06:08 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@lesleylee54 wrote:
i finally agreed to £48.50 as long as i didnt get the price rise that was to come
It doesn't work like that. Everyone will be subject to the annual price increase (April for UK). No one could agree with you that they wouldn't affect you. The terms and conditions you agreed to at renewal allow for the price increase. Sky can increase prices once in any 12 month period, your contract is not a fixed price the discounts are.
18 Feb 2023 06:06 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreI've replied to your other post.
18 Feb 2023 06:07 PM
I see, it was just that at the time i said i couldnt go above £50 a month, i will call them and see what they say. thanks.
18 Feb 2023 06:11 PM
@Daniel0210 Thanks for the reply, i guess i will see what they say, see if i can reduce the BB cost, i think they do something for pensioners, i can but ask.
18 Feb 2023 06:13 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@lesleylee54 wrote:
i think they do something for pensioners
Not as such. This link explains the process if you’re eligible for Sky Broadband Basics.
https://www.sky.com/help/articles/sky-social-tariff
The Sky account holder needs to be claiming Universal Credit, Pension Credit, Income Support, Income based Jobseekers Allowance or Income based Employment Support Allowance. These are the only qualifying benefits so Sky would require the relevant NI number so they can check. It is only available to customers who already have Sky Broadband. The social tariff is for Sky Broadband Superfast 35 with an average download speed of 36Mb/s and the Sky Talk Pay As You Go tariff (ie: all calls are chargeable). It does not offer a discounted Sky Talk plan. The social tariff will be an 18 month deal and will then revert to the normal price. If you are eligible you’ll need to call Sky to join.
18 Feb 2023 06:16 PM
@Daniel0210 Thanks for that link, i do qualify , is it worth ringing them and asking about it.
18 Feb 2023 06:25 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreOnly you can decide that.
18 Feb 2023 07:04 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@lesleylee54 wrote:I see, it was just that at the time i said i couldnt go above £50 a month, i will call them and see what they say. thanks.
At the time they couldn't predict the size of the increase but it was odds-on going to exceed £50 based on historical increases.
But it would seem unlikely you are not bound by the terms and conditions you agreed.
15 Mar 2023 08:49 PM - last edited: 16 Mar 2023 08:26 AM by Kirsty+S27
How can you possibly tie me into a contract, then increase the price under an extremely thinly veiled promise of product improvement, when we both know (removed) all will change, other than just costing more. (removed)
Moderator comments: removed inappropriate language
16 Mar 2023 08:54 AM - last edited: 16 Mar 2023 08:54 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Richpoopshoot wrote:
How can you possibly tie me into a contract, then increase the price...
Because you agreed to it when you signed up.
Oh, and we're customers here.
16 Mar 2023 09:05 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Richpoopshoot wrote:How can you possibly tie me into a contract, then increase the price under an extremely thinly veiled promise of product improvement, when we both know (removed) all will change, other than just costing more. (removed)
Do you have a question? The contract clearly states how prices can change and there's no clause for 'product improvement'.
17 Mar 2023 02:24 PM
Sorry if this is a stupid question. I renewed my contract in December and it states that the TV price cannot go up by more than 10% in 12 months. No limit on increases on other services. The total increase is £7 per month - My TV cost was £26 and will be £29 in April. I know this is only £1.40 more than 10% would be but is this not a breach of contract. I've lost the will to live trying to speak to someone at Sky. Has anyone else had a similar query and got a response from Sky?
17 Mar 2023 02:31 PM - last edited: 17 Mar 2023 02:36 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
The contract wording is ' the increase will not be more than 10% or the increase in the UK Retail Price Index over the 12 months before we tell you about that price increase, whichever is greater'
RPI was running at 13.4% in January (when it was last calculated).
Edit: ah, hang on, that says the increase in RPI, which is much less. I'm now confused.
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