Adopted
The legislative process for the implementation of the Omnibus Directive into Danish law has been completed by introducing (trough two acts and one ordinance) amendments to the following laws:
As required by the Omnibus Directive the new rules have come into force on 28 May 2022.
Act No 2158 of 27 November 2021 amending the Consumer Contracts Act and the Contracts Act (Amendment of the rules on consumer contracts as a result of the implementation of certain parts of the New Deal for Consumers Directive package (Modernisation Directive) and amendments to consumer protection rules falling outside the implementation of the Modernisation Directive) ("Lov nr. 2158 af 27. november 2021 om ændring af lov om forbrugeraftaler og lov om aftaler og andre retshandler på formuerettens område (Ændring af reglerne om forbrugeraftaler som følge af implementering af visse dele af direktivpakken New Deal for Consumers (moderniseringsdirektivet) og ændringer af forbrugerbeskyttende regler, der falder uden for implementering af moderniseringsdirektivet)")
Act No 2192 of 30 November 2021 amending the Marketing Act (Implementation of amendments to the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive and introduction of rules on commercial practices directed at children and young people and new penalty model, etc.) ("Lov 2021-11-30 nr. 2192 om ændring af lov om markedsføring (Gennemførelse af ændringer i direktivet om urimelig handelspraksis og indførelse af regler om handelspraksis rettet mod børn og unge samt ny bødemodel m.v.)")
Order No 2292 of 3 December 2021 amending the Order on Information on the Selling Price and Unit Price of Consumer Goods ("Bekendtgørelse 2021-12-03 nr. 2292 om ændring af bekendtgørelse om oplysning om salgspris og enhedspris for forbrugsvarer")
As required by the Omnibus Directive the new rules have come into force on 28 May 2022.
Amendments to existing laws (see "Implementation Act" above).
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The Danish Consumer Protection Act and Danish Marketing Act provides for administrative fines in case of infringement of the national provisions adopted pursuant to the Unfair Contract Terms Directive. It is the Danish Consumer Ombudsman who monitors the market for infringements and who may issue administrative fines. The number of provisions for which infringement may be met with a fine have been significantly expanded.
According to the amended Art. 34 (1) in the Danish Consumer Protection Act and Art. 37 (3) of the Danish Marketing Act, fines can be imposed for infringements of, inter alia:
In announcements of price reductions, the seller shall indicate the normal sales price, which shall be the lowest applied sales price during a period of not less than 30 days before the application of the price reduction.
For goods which are liable to deteriorate or expire rapidly (in particular food), the 30 days' period has been reduced to 14 days.
In case of progressive, uninterrupted price reductions, the normal sales price shall be the sales price which applied before the first price reduction.
Danish law contains penalty provisions applicable to infringements of the national provisions adopted pursuant to the Price Indications Directive. Pursuant to Art. 37 (3) of the Danish Marketing Act, the Danish Consumer Ombudsman can impose administrative fines. Indicative levels of the fines are not set out in the law, but the indicative criteria (severeness and the offender's turnover) have now been included.
The Unfair Commercial Practices Directive has been implemented in the Danish Consumer Protection Act, so that "digital goods" and "digital services" are excplicitly included in the protection.
The possibility in the New Deal for Consumers directive (2019/2161) of extending the area of application to also include (i) situations where the trader only collects metadata, and (ii) situations where the consumer without having entered into an agreement with the trader is subjected to advertisements in order to access digital goods or digital services, have not been exercised. These situations are therefore not included in the protection.
Online market places that offer search functionalities will have to provide clear information on the main parameters used to the rank product in online searches and their relative importance (Danish Marketing Act Art. 6a).
Provision of search results on the basis of a consumer's online search without clearly indicating any type of advertisement or payment for higher search result ranking has been added to the list of trading practices that are always considered unfair (Danish Marketing Act, Appendix 1, 11(a)).
Failure to comply with these obligations is subject to administrative fines.
Online market places must inform consumers of whether products offered on the market place is offered by a commercial third party or not, based on such third party's declaration to the market place (Danish Marketing Act Art. 6 (2)(7).
This information is considered "essential" and failure to provide it is subject to administrative fines.
Doorstep selling is illegal under current Danish law and remains illegal after the implementation of the directive. Because doorstep selling is illegal and agreements entered in such situations are invalid, it was considered unnecessary to use the option to extend the right to withdraw from a transaction or to implement other provisions.
In relation to commercial excursions, it was decided not to implement any new provisions as the use of commercial excursions are considered to be very limited and the existing regulation is considered sufficient.
Traders who provide access to reviews of products must in a clear and easily understandable way inform the customer of (i) whether the trader has ensured that the reviews actually stem from consumers who have used or bought the products, and (ii) if so, how it has ensured this (Danish Marketing Act, Art. 6 b).
It is considered misleading commercial practice to state that reviews are made by consumers who have actually used or bought the product if the trader has not taken appropriate measures to ensure that the review actually stems from such consumers (Danish Marketing Act, annex 1, no. 23 b).
It is also considered misleading commercial practice to submit or acquire fake reviews from other commercial or private parties (Danish Marketing Act, annex 1, no. 23 c).
It would seem that marketing goods in one Member State, as being identical to goods marketed in other Member States, while the goods have a different composition ("dual quality") has not been added to the list of misleading commercial practice.
Pursuant to current Danish law, traders can be held liable for damages resulting from unfair commercial practices (Danish Marketing Act, Art. 24 (2).
Also, a contract concluded as a result of an unfair commercial practice may be set partly or wholly set aside (Danish Contracts Act, Art. 38c (1), cf. article 36 (1)).
Current Danish law contains penalty provisions applicable to infringements of the national provisions adopted pursuant to the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, pursuant to Article 37 (3) of the Danish Marketing Act.
Under the amended Art. 37 (7) of the Danish Marketing Act, violation of the provisions regarding unfair commercial practices which may hurt the interests of consumers in at least two other member states may be fined with up to 4% of the traders annual turnover in the relevant member states (capped at EUR 4,000,000 if there is no information on the trader's annual turnover).
Goods with digital elements as well as digital content and digital services are now subject to the same rules as all other goods and services covered by the Consumer Rights Directive.
For goods with digital elements and digital content and digital services, however, additional information requirements for traders apply which have been implemented in the Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 8 (1)(23) and (24). These include that the trader must, before entering the contract, give the consumer:
Yes, the Danish Consumer Contracts Act now also applies to situations where the consumer "pays" for the digital content or digital service. This is done by reference in the Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 2 to the Danish Sales of Goods Act, Art. 4a (3).
The possibility of expanding the area of applicability to also include (i) situations where the trader only collects meta data or (ii) situations where the consumer without having an agreement with the trader is exposed to advertisements in order to access digital content or a digital service, has not been utilized and will therefore not be covered by the national consumer protection regulation.
Traders must now always provide their telephone number to the consumer when concluding a distance or off-premise contract. The obligation to indicate the fax number, on the other hand, is no longer applicable. (Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 8 (1)(2) and Art. 17 (1)(2).
The trader must now also inform the consumer, where relevant, if the price has been personalized based on automated decision-making process (Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 8 (1)(7).
Where there is only limited space or time to display the information, the main characteristics of the goods or services, the total price, the right of withdrawal, the duration of the contract and the conditions of termination of indeterminate contracts must be indicated (Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 11 (2). However, the trader must still provide the other mandatory information, including the model withdrawal form, in an appropriate manner.
Before concluding a distance contract on an online marketplace, the online marketplace provider shall provide, in a clear and comprehensible manner suitable for distance communication, information on
(Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 8a)
(1) above is a requirement set out by the Danish legislator in addition to the information required in according with the Directive.
Upon withdrawal from a contract for the provision of digital content or a digital service, the trader must:
(a) cannot be used outside the context of the digital content or digital service,
(b) relates only to the consumer's activity in using the digital content or digital service,
(c) has been aggregated with other information of the trader and is not separable or can be separated only with disproportionate effort; or
(d) is jointly generated by the consumer and others and other consumers can continue to make use of the content.
(Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 22a (1))
The trader shall make available to the consumer, at the consumer's request, any content other than personal data provided or generated by the consumer using the digital content or digital service, unless that content is covered by Art. 22a (1)(2)(a)-(c) above. The consumer shall be entitled to download that content free of charge, without hindrance from the trader, within a reasonable time and in a commonly used and machine-readable format (Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 22a (2)).
The trader may prevent the consumer's continued use of the digital content or digital service, in particular by making the digital content or digital service inaccessible to the consumer or by making the consumer's account inactive, without prejudice to the consumer's rights under Art. 22a (2) (Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 22a (3)).
The right of withdrawal does not apply to delivered non-financial services, if the delivery of the service (a) is not provided against payment or if it (b) is commenced with the consumers' prior express consent and acknowledgement that they thereby lose their right of withdrawal (Danish Contracts Act, Art. 18 (2)(2)).
The right of withdrawal also does not apply to the delivery of digital content which is not delivered on a physical medium, if (a) the digital content is not delivered against payment; or (b) performance has begun with the consumers' prior express consent and acknowledgement that they thereby lose their right of withdrawal and the trader has given a confirmation in accordance with the second subparagraph of Art. 10 (2) or the second subparagraph of Art. 13 (2) (Danish Contracts Act, Art. 18 (2)(13)).
The confirmation must be provided on paper or, if the consumer consents, another durable medium.
In assessing fines for infringements referred to in the Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 34 (1) and the Danish Marketing Act, Art. 37 (3) (see answer to A.), which may harm the collective interests of consumers in at least two EU Member States other than Denmark, the fine may not exceed 4% of the annual turnover of the trader in the Member States concerned. If information on the trader's turnover is not available, the fine may not exceed EUR 2,000,000 (Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 34 (4) and Danish Marketing Act, Art. 37 (7)).
Under the amended Danish Consumer Contracts Act, Art. 38f, the Danish Minister of Justice may, on the recommendation of the Consumer Ombudsman, lay down rules to the effect that traders who apply specified standard terms which are clearly unfair to apply in consumer contractual relations, as defined in Sec. 38c of the Consumer Contracts Act, shall be punished by a fine. The Danish Minister of Justice may also lay down rules providing for fines under the before mentioned infringements, which may harm the collective interests of consumers in at least two EU Member States other than Denmark; these fines may not exceed 4 per cent of the trader's annual turnover in the Member State or Member States concerned. If information on the turnover of the trader is not available, the fine may not exceed EUR 2,000,000.
The only optional provisions/deviations Denmark has made use of are.
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