Home / Business / Cineplex has made nearly $40M from online ticket fees at heart of drip-pricing lawsuit

Cineplex has made nearly $40M from online ticket fees at heart of drip-pricing lawsuit

Cineplex Inc. has made almost $40 million from online booking fees, which are central to a competition bureau lawsuit against the Canadian cinema chain.

Commissioner says theatre chain being deceptive, while Cineplex wants claims tossed/

Cineplex has cancelled screenings of a South Indian film following four drive-by shootings at movie theatres throughout the Greater Toronto Area the day it premiered. A Cineplex theatre at Yonge and Eglinton in Toronto on Monday December 16, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Aaron Vincent Elkaim

Cineplex Inc. has made almost $40 million from online booking fees, which are central to a competition bureau lawsuit against the Canadian cinema chain.

An agreed statement of facts filed in the case before the Competition Tribunal shows Canada’s largest theatre owner made more than $11.6 million in the six months after the fees were implemented in June 2022. It made another $27.3 million on the fees in 2023.

Cineplex charges an additional $1.50 on every ticket purchased online, but Scene+ members get a discount and CineClub members have the fee waived.

Competition commissioner Matthew Boswell alleges the online fees are deceptive, because moviegoers are not presented with the full price of a movie ticket on the very first page they encounter when buying tickets from Cineplex.com.

Cineplex has argued Boswell’s claims are without merit and should be thrown out, with costs awarded to Cineplex, because moviegoers are told about fees they may face from the start of the purchase process.

The bureau sued Cineplex in May 2023, alleging the company is breaking the law by adding a fee that raises the price of tickets purchased online.

Cineplex Canada is facing two class-action lawsuits for allegedly using drip pricing. What is this tactic and how does it affect consumers? The CBC’s Manjula Selvarajah explains.

It says an investigation found consumers can’t buy tickets online at advertised prices, because of the mandatory $1.50 fee.

The bureau alleges this is misleading and an example of drip pricing, also known as a junk fee. It notes that recent amendments to the Competition Act explicitly recognize drip pricing as a harmful business practice.

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Credit belongs to : www.cbc.ca

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