Reporting to Trading Standards
This advice applies to Wales. See advice for See advice for England, See advice for Northern Ireland, See advice for Scotland
If you think a business has broken the law or acted unfairly, you can report them to Trading Standards.
Trading Standards use the information you give them to investigate unfair trading and illegal business activity, like rogue traders and scams.
Trading Standards can take businesses to court or stop them operating, but they won’t help you fix your problem - for example, they can’t help you get a refund.
You can get help with your consumer problem from the Citizens Advice consumer service.
Check what you should report to Trading Standards
You should report a business to Trading Standards if they sold you something:
unsafe or dangerous, like an electronic appliance with faulty wiring or food past its use-by date
fake
not as described - for example, you bought a package holiday but something advertised wasn’t included
you didn’t want to buy - for example, they put pressure on you
You can also tell them about a business if:
they scammed you - for example, you paid for something online that you didn’t receive and you couldn’t contact the seller
they tried to stop you using your legal rights - for example, they said you can’t return faulty goods
they weren’t clear about the price or added on extra costs - for example, they advertised theatre ticket prices without booking fees
they sold products to people who looked underage without asking for ID - for example, alcohol, knives or fireworks
they didn’t carry out work properly - for example, kitchen fitters left your home in a dangerous state
Report a business to Trading Standards
To report to Trading Standards, you need to contact the Citizens Advice consumer service.
We’ll pass your report to Trading Standards and we can also give you advice about your problem. You can:
use our online form - we’ll get back to you within 5 days
What happens after you've reported to Trading Standards
Trading Standards will use the information you give to decide if they’ll investigate. They’ll only contact you if they need more information.
Even if Trading Standards don't contact you, they might use your evidence to take action against the business in the future. For example, if other people make complaints about the same business.
Get more help with your consumer problem
If a business isn’t helping you fix something that went wrong, you could:
try making a formal complaint
get help from a dispute resolution scheme
take them to court
Find out more about how to fix your consumer problem.
As a charity, we rely on your support to help millions of people solve their problems each year. Please donate if you can to help us continue our work.
Help us improve our website
Take 3 minutes to tell us if you found what you needed on our website. Your feedback will help us give millions of people the information they need.
Page last reviewed on 11 November 2019