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Canada’s Office of Consumer Affairs (OCA)

Canadian Consumer Handbook 2007

Consumer Tips - Mail Order

Mail order is another way that consumers can make purchases. This can include purchases such as from catalogues, from magazine offers, bill inserts, etc.

As mail order purchase is a type of consumer transaction, it is important to keep the following in mind:

Ordering

  • Keep a record of the name, address and phone number of the company, the goods you ordered, the date of your order, the amount you paid, and the method of payment.
  • Keep a record of any delivery period that was promised.
  • You may wish to send your order and payment by registered mail. Canada Post offers this service for a fee, attaching a tracking number to your package so you can check that your package arrived.
  • If you are told that the shipment will be delayed, write the date of that notice in your records and the new shipping date, if you've agreed to wait longer.
  • To limit unwanted mail, sign up with the free Do Not Contact service, operated by the Canadian Marketing Association, a private trade group. The Association will instruct its mail-marketing members to take you off their lists. However, not all marketers belong to this association, meaning you may still continue to receive some unwanted mail.

Unsolicited Goods

You are under no obligation to accept or pay for any merchandise you receive in the mail that you did not order.

In most provinces and territories, when the sender asks for the merchandise back, you must return it at the sender's expense; however, in some provinces and territories you cannot be required to pay for the goods or services unless you agreed to do so in writing.

To complain about unsolicited goods, contact your provincial or territorial consumer affairs office.

Mail Fraud

  • Be suspicious of "free gifts" that require a "tax payment" or "registration fee," sweepstakes requiring an entry fee or purchase, employment or work-at-home opportunities requiring a fee, offers requiring your credit card number or bank account number, loans that require you to pay a fee in advance, mailings that look like they are from official government agencies when they are not, and prize notices requiring you to call a 1-900 number.
  • Read the offer carefully. Get the advice of another person whose opinion you trust.
  • Deal only with companies or charities whose reputation and integrity are known.
  • Never give out your credit card number or personal, financial or employment information unless you know who you are dealing with.
  • Never send money for any "free" merchandise or services.
  • Think before making an impulse purchase. Take the time to compare the products, services and prices to those of similar products in local stores.
  • Keep a record of the order, notes of the conversation and copies of the advertisement, cancelled cheque, receipt, letters and envelopes.
  • Check out the company with your provincial or territorial consumer affairs office. Mail fraud is a crime.