monkeynuz wrote: » Ironically some companies in Ireland were slower to accept the eircode than UK ones.
tuxy wrote: » That's because an Eircode is not necessary to ensure delivery within Ireland. Any company these days that don't accept an eircode or remove the requirement for a postcode simply does not want business from Ireland and is best avoided.
monkeynuz wrote: » Really? I thought the eircode was just as relevant for Irish orders as overseas, considering they're both delivered in Ireland? Personally I don't care whether a company accepts it or not, I was merely trying to help the OP, you have slightly derailed the thread.
tuxy wrote: » Depends on who will be delivering it. Officially An Post do not require an eircode. I don't think it's derailing to advise people to avoid dealing with companies who do not wish to offer a service within Ireland.
monkeynuz wrote: » It is unhelpful to just tell people not to deal with companies that aren't fully set up for eircode.
tuxy wrote: » Apple are not setup to use Irish postal addresses with or without eircodes. They do not currently want all their services available to Irish customers. It is useful to make people aware of this. No what I said is companies can easily offer services to Irish customers without using eircodes if they choose. It's not mandatory.
monkeynuz wrote: » This is hilarious, this is taken from two of your previous posts. "Any company these days that don't accept an eircode or remove the requirement for a postcode simply does not want business from Ireland and is best avoided." "I don't think it's derailing to advise people to avoid dealing with companies who do not wish to offer a service within Ireland."
tuxy wrote: » I now withdraw and apologise for my previous statements. I advise people to only deal with companies that do not wish to offer services in Ireland.
Bilbert55 wrote: » im havin the same issue? did u find a solution?
Victor wrote: » Be wary of handing out your Eircode, it identifies your home and given that there are an average of 2.7 people per home, effectively you.
Mezzotint wrote: » Apple seem to make a complete mess of Irish addresses on their website. I found when I ordered things the lines of the address were mashed into some kind of Germanic-Style format and the package ended up with lines missing, despite having supplied them. The eircode bit worked, but the rest of the address got garbled.
tuxy wrote: » Someone should tell them about this problem.
Mezzotint wrote: » I fed it back twice and got no response. They clearly just like our tax rates.
tuxy wrote: » True, they have little interest in having Irish customers.
Mezzotint wrote: » Seems that way sometimes, particularly with the complete lack of interest in opening retail and so on here. Google are even worse - they only bothered making Pixel phones available here very recently, despite the spec being identical to the EU and UK (charger wise)