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#1 | |
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Registered User
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Sunday Times: Ikea 22% more expensive in ROI over NI
I'm going up North to buy my sofa ...
Savvy Irish shoppers are saving 22% by crossing the border to buy their flatpack furniture http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle6736277.ece Quote:
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#6 |
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Wait, so the article is saying I can spend two hours in the car and half a tank of petrol to save 27 euro? Or save a fiver on a rug... Em okay. I think I'll take my chances going to the Irish store. Big difference between saving 300 euro on a home entertainment system in Currys and a few cent on some teaspoons in IKEA
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Isn't this the part where he explodes?
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#7 |
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back at you - from Irish Indo last week...
"Despite our higher VAT rate, some soft furnishings are cheaper in Dublin than in Ikea's Belfast store. A price comparison of six products yesterday found that four were cheaper to buy in Dublin than in Northern Ireland. The products include: A Klippan two-seater sofa priced at €125 in Ballymun. The UK price was £117.45 (€135.76). A Klippan pouffe was €45 in Dublin, compared with £39.15 (€45.25). The IKEA 365+ 18-piece dinner service was €29.99, almost €3 cheaper than the £28.38 (€32.80) charged in the North. A Granat cushion which cost €2.99 was seven cent cheaper in the Republic. " Basically there are something like 15,000 items for sale in Ikea. Do you really think every price of every item is going to be identical to the daily exchange rate in 2 different stores in 2 different countries. |
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#8 | |
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Registered User
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Quote:
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#9 |
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Registered User
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Don't forget, its silly season for newspapers. No politics / No courts, even no scandals! - They have to fill up the papers somehow, so they'll go thourh thousands of prices of stores and find 4 or 5 items out of the thousands of items and make it a mega headline.
Of couse tha fact that their newspapers are cheaper in the north, is of no interest!
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#10 |
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Registered User
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In fairness to IKEA they seem to have really made an effort to ensure pricing here was in line with the UK.
It only seems to be higher value items that have a larger price difference but if you strip away VAT and factor in what it would cost you to travel up north and back, then it still makes sense to purchase in Ikea Dublin. E.g. http://url.ie/25vj ~€100 difference (inc VAT) ~€50 difference (ex VAT) |
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#12 |
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Registered User
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No matter how many times you tell people this...they will never understand.
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Rig a deal |
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#13 |
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Noticed IKEA more expensive in Dublin than Belfast
I was in IKEA Dublin yesterday and noticed a 15% difference in the price of one item that I new the price of in Belfast. This is after taking into account the VAT and exchange rate. I checked the web site to see if the price had changed up north and it hadn't.
Kitchen chair cushion £4 in Belfast and €5.75 in Dublin. Convert £4 GBP to EURO = 4.70536 EUR (1 GBP = 1.17634 EUR on www.xe.com) Add the VAT difference (6.5% Is this correct?) 4.71 + 31c = €5.02 That works out at 73 cent difference or roughly 15%. IKEA stated that the prices were the same in the south as the north. Am I missing something
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