Online purchases from South African retailers in Northern Cape are protected by the Consumer Protection Act and the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act (ECT Act). You have a 5-day cooling-off right for online purchases and strong rights against non-delivery or deceptive advertising.
Step 1. For non-delivery: contact the retailer in writing, citing your order number and the promised delivery date. Give a 5-business-day ultimatum.
Step 2. For a defective product, exercise your section 56 CPA right within 6 months of delivery — demand repair, replacement, or refund.
Step 3. For online purchases, you have a 7-day cooling-off right under the ECT Act — you can return the goods without giving a reason (some exclusions apply, e.g., personalised items).
Step 4. If the retailer refuses, lodge a complaint with the National Consumer Commission (NCC) at thencc.org.za or the National Consumer Tribunal (NCT).
Step 5. For credit card purchases, contact your bank about a chargeback if the retailer fails to deliver or is fraudulent.
📋 CCMA: Kimberley CCMA (053 832 7571)
⚖️ Legal Aid SA: Legal Aid South Africa — Kimberley (053 839 3300)
🏛️ High Court: Northern Cape Division of the High Court, Kimberley (053 839 4300)
🏢 Magistrates' Courts: Kimberley, Upington, Springbok, De Aar, and other magistrates' courts
🏠 Rental Housing Tribunal: Northern Cape Rental Housing Tribunal (053 839 4000)
The Northern Cape faces unique access-to-justice challenges due to geographic size. Mining rights, water access, and !Khomani San indigenous community rights are specific concerns.