layout: page
title: UK Consumer Contract Terms — CRA 2015, Consumer Contracts Regulations 2013, DMCC Act 2024
description: Drafting reference for UK consumer terms — Consumer Rights Act 2015 implied terms and remedies, Consumer Contracts (Information, Cancellation and Additional Charges) Regulations 2013, DMCC Act 2024 subscription rules, CPUTR 2008, ADR Regulations 2015.
permalink: /handbook/uk/consumer/consumer-terms/
lastVerified: 2026-05-11
sources:
  - url: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2015/15/contents
    title: Consumer Rights Act 2015
    accessed: 2026-05-11
  - url: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2013/3134/contents/made
    title: Consumer Contracts (Information, Cancellation and Additional Charges) Regulations 2013 (SI 2013/3134)
    accessed: 2026-05-11
  - url: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2008/1277/contents/made
    title: Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 (SI 2008/1277)
    accessed: 2026-05-11
  - url: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2024/13/contents
    title: Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024
    accessed: 2026-05-11
  - url: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1974/39/contents
    title: Consumer Credit Act 1974
    accessed: 2026-05-11
  - url: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/542/contents/made
    title: Alternative Dispute Resolution for Consumer Disputes (Competent Authorities and Information) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/542)
    accessed: 2026-05-11
confidence: high

UK consumer contract terms are the set of standard contractual provisions used by a trader to sell goods, services or digital content to consumers. The drafting baseline is the Consumer Rights Act 2015 (CRA) — which consolidated the implied-terms regimes of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 (consumer aspects), the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 (consumer aspects), the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1994, and the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999. Layered on top is the Consumer Contracts (Information, Cancellation and Additional Charges) Regulations 2013 (SI 2013/3134), which imposes pre-contractual information requirements and the 14-day right to cancel for distance and off-premises contracts. The Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 (CPUTR, SI 2008/1277) prohibits misleading and aggressive commercial practices. The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 — Royal Assent 24 May 2024 — gives the CMA new civil enforcement powers and introduces specific subscription-contract rules.

See Website Terms of Use for the access-side contract, Privacy Notice for data-protection compliance, and Unfair Contract Terms for the underlying UCTA / CRA Part 2 framework.

“Consumer” — CRA s.2(3)

A “consumer” for CRA purposes is “an individual acting for purposes that are wholly or mainly outside that individual’s trade, business, craft or profession” (s.2(3) CRA). The “wholly or mainly” formulation reflects the EU Consumer Rights Directive 2011/83 and admits mixed-purpose use — a self-employed user buying a laptop predominantly for personal use is a consumer for the purposes of that purchase. Burden of proof falls on the trader (s.2(4)) where the consumer’s status is in issue.

A “trader” is “a person acting for purposes relating to that person’s trade, business, craft or profession, whether acting personally or through another person acting in the trader’s name or on the trader’s behalf” (s.2(2)).

CRA 2015 — Three Substantive Regimes

CRA Part 1 splits consumer-trader contracts into three regimes by subject matter:

Goods — ss.3-32

Where the contract is for the sale or supply of goods (including conditional sale, hire-purchase, contracts for transfer of goods, contracts for hire of goods), four implied terms apply automatically and cannot be excluded (s.31):

Tiered remedies for goods (ss.20-24):

  1. Short-term right to reject (s.20) — within 30 days of delivery (or possession passing). Full refund. Right is lost on acceptance — see Bowmaker (Commercial) Ltd v Day (1965) for guidance on what acceptance means in practice.
  2. Right to repair or replacement (s.23) — at the trader’s expense, within a reasonable time and without significant inconvenience to the consumer.
  3. Right to price reduction or final right to reject (s.24) — after one failed attempt at repair or replacement, or where repair/replacement is impossible or disproportionate. Price reduction by an appropriate amount up to the full price.

After the first six months, the burden of proof shifts from the trader to the consumer to show that the goods were not of satisfactory quality at the time of delivery (s.19(15)).

Digital Content — ss.33-47

Where the contract is for the supply of digital content (data produced and supplied in digital form — s.2(9)) for which the consumer pays a price (or which is supplied with other goods/services for which the consumer pays), three implied terms apply (ss.34-36):

Remedies for digital content (ss.42-46):

Free digital content supplied with paid goods/services is also within ss.33-47 (s.33). Updates issued by the trader (security patches, feature updates) form part of the digital content and must not cause it to become non-conforming (s.40).

Services — ss.48-57

Where the contract is for the supply of services, three implied terms apply:

Remedies for services (ss.54-57):

Pre-contractual information that the consumer takes into account in deciding to enter the contract becomes a term of the contract (s.50). This is an important consumer-protection lever: marketing claims (timeliness, quality, scope) become enforceable contract terms.

Part 2 — Unfair Terms

CRA Part 2 (ss.61-76) replaces the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 and substantially extends the fairness regime. Key provisions:

The Competition and Markets Authority and Trading Standards have enforcement powers under Part 8 of the Enterprise Act 2002 and Schedule 5 CRA.

Consumer Contracts Regulations 2013 — Pre-Contract Information and Right to Cancel

SI 2013/3134 implements the Consumer Rights Directive 2011/83 (retained). Three classes of contract are covered:

Required Information — Schedule 2

Schedule 2 enumerates 24 items of pre-contract information that must be provided to the consumer in a clear and comprehensible manner. The most operationally significant include:

14-Day Right to Cancel — regs 27-38

For distance and off-premises contracts the consumer has an unconditional right to cancel within 14 days of:

Cancellation requires the consumer to send a “clear statement of the decision to cancel” (reg 32(2)) — the model cancellation form in Schedule 3 Part B may be used but is not required.

Refund of all payments received from the consumer, including standard delivery, within 14 days of the cancellation (reg 34(1)). For goods, the trader may withhold the refund until the goods have been returned or the consumer has supplied evidence of return (reg 34(8)).

Return shipping — where the consumer bears the cost of return (which must have been disclosed pre-contract), the consumer is responsible for shipping back. Where the trader has not disclosed the cost obligation, the trader bears the cost.

Carve-Outs from the Right to Cancel — reg 28

Several contracts are excluded from the right to cancel:

Service / Digital Content Started Before Cancellation Window Expires — regs 36-37

Where the consumer requests the service / digital content to begin during the cancellation period and the consumer cancels before completion:

Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024

The DMCC Act 2024 received Royal Assent on 24 May 2024 and is being commenced in phases through 2025-2026. It introduces:

CMA civil enforcement powers (Part 3). The CMA can:

The previous regime — court action by the CMA, Trading Standards or the OFT predecessors — remains for some breaches but is supplemented by the direct-action route.

Consumer subscription contracts (Part 4 Chapter 2). New rights for consumers entering into subscription contracts:

The subscription provisions implement secondary legislation that is being developed by the Department for Business and Trade through 2025-2026.

Direct consumer remedies for unfair commercial practices (Part 4 Chapter 1). Replaces and consolidates the consumer redress provisions previously in CPUTR 2008 — new statutory rights of unwind, damages and price reduction for consumers misled by trader practices.

CPUTR 2008 — Unfair Commercial Practices

The Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 (SI 2008/1277) implements Directive 2005/29/EC (retained). The Regulations prohibit:

DMCC 2024 modernises some terminology and gives direct enforcement effect.

Consumer Credit and Other Sectoral Layers

Where the consumer contract is a regulated credit agreement under the Consumer Credit Act 1974 (CCA) — credit, hire-purchase, conditional sale, regulated guarantee or indemnity — additional formal and substantive requirements apply: APR disclosure (CCA s.20 + the Consumer Credit (Total Charge for Credit) Regulations 2010), form regulations (CCA s.60 + the Consumer Credit (Agreements) Regulations 2010 SI 2010/1014), pre-contract information sheet (CCA s.55 + the Consumer Credit (Disclosure of Information) Regulations 2010 SI 2010/1013), and the FCA Consumer Credit sourcebook (CONC).

For financial services more generally, the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 + FCA Handbook (including the Consumer Duty under PRIN 2A from 31 July 2023) imposes overlapping consumer obligations.

ADR and ODR

The Alternative Dispute Resolution for Consumer Disputes (Competent Authorities and Information) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/542) implements Directive 2013/11/EU (retained). Traders must:

The Online Dispute Resolution Regulation 524/2013 (retained as UK ODR) requires online traders selling to consumers to provide a link to the ODR platform. The EU ODR platform was retained as UK-relevant until its EU sunset; the UK has indicated a domestic replacement is under consideration.

Sample Consumer-Terms Structure

A compliant consumer-terms document typically includes:

  1. Identification. Trader legal name, trading names, registered office, company number, contact details (Reg 6 ECR 2002 overlap).
  2. Description of products / services. Main characteristics, technical specifications, applicable interoperability and functionality (for digital content).
  3. Price. Total price including VAT; how additional charges (delivery, optional features) are calculated; payment methods accepted.
  4. Order acceptance. When and how the contract is formed — typically on the trader’s confirmation email rather than at order placement.
  5. Delivery / performance. Timeframes; partial-delivery treatment; risk transfer (CRA s.29 — risk passes on delivery to consumer).
  6. Right to cancel. 14-day cooling-off period for distance / off-premises contracts; cancellation procedure; model cancellation form; carve-outs (bespoke, perishable, sealed-for-hygiene, started-digital-content); refund mechanism and timeframe; return shipping responsibility.
  7. Consumer rights under CRA. Reference to satisfactory quality, fit for purpose, as described; tiered remedies; complaints procedure.
  8. Subscription terms. Where applicable — duration, renewal mechanism, reminder, cancellation route (DMCC 2024-aligned).
  9. Payment and ownership. Title transfer; retention-of-title where applicable; payment terms; consequences of late payment.
  10. Warranty / commercial guarantee. Additional rights beyond the CRA statutory rights.
  11. Complaints. Internal complaints procedure; ADR availability; ODR link where applicable.
  12. Liability. Within CRA Part 2 fairness and s.65 limits.
  13. Termination. Symmetric rights; refund treatment.
  14. Data protection. Cross-reference to privacy notice.
  15. Governing law and jurisdiction. English law (or relevant UK jurisdiction); courts of England (or relevant); preservation of consumer mandatory rights.
  16. Effective date. Version and last-updated.

Recent CMA Enforcement

The CMA has been active on consumer-protection enforcement in 2023-2025:

Bibliography

Cross-references

Disclaimer: Handbook content is informational, not legal advice. DMCC 2024 commencement is rolling through 2025-2026 and secondary legislation on subscription contracts is in development. CMA enforcement priorities evolve. Consult a solicitor admitted in England and Wales for binding decisions about your specific consumer-contract drafting. Last verified 2026-05-11.