'Hugely disappointing': Big three energy retailers drop fixed rate plan
All of the big three energy retailers have dropped their fixed-rate electricity plans in the aftermath of 17 per cent price hikes.
All of the big three energy retailers have dropped their fixed-rate electricity plans in the aftermath of 17 per cent price hikes.
The major power companies' default mode is to treat loyal, long-term customers as complete mugs. You can ask for discounts, but it's finding the best deal where the pursuit of cheaper power becomes complicated.
CHOICE has called on the federal government to stop propping up ''junk'' health insurance policies with tax breaks and rebates.
Danny Marcuson was not surprised to learn online transactions using stolen credit card details were on the rise.
Online credit card fraud is on the rise, with fraudsters who use stolen card details netting the lion's share of more than $530 million dollars last year, industry body Australian Payments Network has revealed.
Australians who bought a packet of Nurofen between 2011 and 2015 could be compensated after the company that makes the popular painkillers agreed to settle a consumer class action.
With 22 per cent of children considered overweight or obese, the NSW chief health officer is urging parents to increase vegetable consumption.
The rise of superbugs has seen global health experts urge farmers to limit antibiotic use. But one salmon company says diseases have forced it to increase the dosage over the past few years.
Insurer AAMI has been criticised after it sent an "ad" that strongly resembled a bill to a woman in Sydney.
From gym memberships, to vitamins and beauty treatments, the average Australian spends $1142 every year on their physical wellbeing.
Unscrupulous retirement village operators in NSW will be targeted under a suite of reforms to "crack down" on the industry.
These residents are trying to fight NBN and Telstra's plan to scrap their relatively new HFC connection, which gives them stunning broadband speeds of 100Mbps.
When I was a teenager, I used my gift vouchers avidly, but in 2017 not everyone is as diligent with their gift cards.
WA's consumer watchdog is looking into allegations that a Sydney events company advertised speakers for a conference in Perth without those people agreeing to appear or even knowing of the event.
The owner of a Sydney CBD noodle bar has been ordered to publish two newspaper notices owning up to six serious food breaches.
Frans and Nicky couldn't believe their luck when $10,400 lobbed into their bank account from the ATO.
Car manufacturer Ford will face court over allegations it misled customers who had purchased faulty vehicles.
Aldi Australia has confirmed a kitchen tap alleged to have up to 15 times the maximum allowable level of lead is safe for use.
State and Territory consumer affairs ministers will consider concerns about the retirement industry following a joint Fairfax and Four Corners investigation.
A Federal Court judge has rejected a request for him to taste a kids' snack food at the centre of a legal stoush over its nutritional value.
Lululemon has landed itself in hot water over website representations that claimed "no returns and no exchanges" on sale items.
Health groups are urging food companies to disclose added sugars on product labels, saying this will lead to more accurate health star ratings and win back consumer trust.
Premier Gladys Berejiklian says she does not need to ban plastic bags in NSW, "because 80 per cent of plastic bags" will already be banned by the supermarkets themselves.
Toyota, Mazda, Lexus, BMW and Subaru have been refitting vehicles with potentially faulty airbags, an investigation by Choice has found.
Coffee husk is traditionally discarded by farmers. But an alternative reusable cup design has found a new purpose for the waste.
Former students of the failed Sage Institute of Fitness remain in limbo, yet some have been called on to repay student loans this tax time.
Australia's psychiatrists have broken ranks with the medical fraternity and begun calling on the government to lift the ban on e-cigarettes.
Liquor brands will think twice about using models with "youthful looks" in their advertising.
Members of the public have received tax refunds to the tune of thousands of dollars without having lodged tax returns, raising suspicions of fraudulent activity being conducted in their names.
Bakeries, seafood and meat stores, sushi and pizza joints all made their way on to the food safety "name and shame" register.
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