
Subscribe & Follow
Jobs
- Experienced Model Booker (Agent) Cape Town
- Copywriter Johannesburg North
- Content Producer Johannesburg
- Human Resources Intern Cape Town
- Senior Financial Accountant Cape Town
- JobMail Telesales Executive Pretoria
- Telesales Executive Pretoria
- Paid Media Specialist Johannesburg
- Traffic Manager (Junior to Mid) Johannesburg
- Experienced Talent Booker (Agent) Cape Town
iStore advertising complaint dismissed by ARB

The complainant provided a photograph of the in-store advertisement and argued that it did not explicitly state that the offer was limited to customers whose existing contracts with network providers had concluded. They contended that this omission led to confusion about eligibility for the promotion, stating, “What is not stated is that if you still have a contract with one of the networks, the deal cannot be done.”
iStore’s response
In its defence, iStore explained that the “Contract Price Freeze” offer was tied to customers’ existing contracts with Vodacom, Telkom, or MTN. The retailer clarified that contract upgrades are only possible once the current contract term has ended, a stipulation determined by the respective network providers.
The company also pointed out that the advertisement explicitly included the disclaimer “terms and conditions apply,” which encompasses the networks' upgrade terms and trade-in policies.
ARB’s assessment
The ARB evaluated the case under Clause 4.2.1 of Section II of the Code of Advertising Practice, which prohibits advertising that is likely to mislead consumers through ambiguity, omission, or exaggerated claims.
The Directorate acknowledged that the complainant’s interpretation was understandable but ruled that the advertisement was not misleading to a “reasonable consumer.” It noted that in South Africa, the process of upgrading a mobile contract is widely understood to occur only at the end of the contract term.
Context of 'contract price freeze'
The ARB highlighted that major network providers such as MTN, Vodacom, and Cell C explicitly outline upgrade eligibility on their websites, making it clear that such benefits apply at the end of the contractual period. For example:
- MTN allows upgrades from month 21 of a 24-month contract.
- Vodacom and Cell C require customers to check their eligibility before upgrading.
The Directorate found that the phrase “contract price freeze” might momentarily confuse some consumers. However, the hypothetical reasonable consumer would ultimately interpret the offer as allowing customers to maintain their existing contract price when renewing their contract and upgrading to a new device.
Related
Samsung Galaxy S25 shows why Honor is eating its lunch in SA Lindsey Schutters 17 hours Warc's Creative 100 released, Apple no.1 brand for creativity 2 days Orchard on 25 founder Jay Badza passes away at 38 Karabo Ledwaba 2 days Why Jennifer Hudson's show is a digital marketing sensation Karabo Ledwaba 2 days Pineapple's ‘caveman’ ad found offensive by advertising board Karabo Ledwaba 3 days #InternationalWomensDay2025: Sinmisola Hughes-Obisesan - A visionary driving Africa's creative future Karabo Ledwaba 7 Mar 2025 ‘We find out when you do’ says iStore CEO about new Apple products Lindsey Schutters 4 Mar 2025 Complete winners of 97th Oscars, South Africa's The Last Ranger misses out Karabo Ledwaba 3 Mar 2025

About Karabo Ledwaba
Karabo Ledwaba is a Marketing and Media Editor at Bizcommunity and award-winning journalist. Before joining the publication she worked at Sowetan as a content producer and reporter. She was also responsible for the leadership page at SMag, Sowetan's lifestyle magazine. Contact her at karabo@bizcommunity.com