I visited DFS Carrickmines with my aunt to purchase two tables for around €1,700 and experienced one of the most shocking cases of poor service and discrimination I have ever seen. The price clearly displayed on the shop floor did not match the price on the website, and the salesperson then quoted yet another, different price. We were ready to pay in full in cash and had already begun providing our details when staff suddenly refused to honour the displayed price. When we asked to speak to a manager, we were told no manager was available, even by phone, and that someone would call us the next day. This is unacceptable and appears to breach Irish consumer law. Under the Consumer Protection Act 2007 (Section 57), a trader must not supply goods at a price higher than the one displayed, and the European Communities (Requirements to Indicate Product Prices) Regulations require that selling prices are clearly visible and inclusive of all charges. This kind of pricing confusion and refusal to honour the displayed price undermines consumer rights and trust.
Far more disturbing, however, was the behaviour of another staff member named Sinead. While I explained the situation to my aunt in Spanish—because she does not speak English—Sinead approached us and, without even introducing herself, insisted that we should not be speaking Spanish because the salesperson was present. She said we “had to speak English” so that staff would know what we were discussing, even though we had communicated perfectly in English with the salesperson. This was humiliating and xenophobic. No business has the right to dictate what language customers speak to each other, especially when one person cannot speak English. Such behaviour appears to violate the Equal Status Acts 2000–2018, which prohibit discrimination in the provision of goods and services on the grounds of race, nationality or ethnic origin, and which explicitly ban harassment that creates a hostile or offensive environment.
This experience was not only frustrating but deeply offensive. Acts of xenophobia and discrimination have no place in Irish society or in any business operating here. We will be asking for a full investigation of this incident by the appropriate authorities, including the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission and the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission. DFS must immediately review its pricing practices to comply with consumer law and must provide urgent staff training on equality, respect and anti-discrimination standards.
Until this matter is properly addressed and corrective action is taken, I cannot recommend DFS Carrickmines to anyone. This incident should serve as a serious warning to all customers and a call for accountability from the company.
Recommendation: AVOID!