Home Depot to pay $2 million to settle lawsuit alleging it overcharged customers

Home Depot must pay nearly $2 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged it charged customers higher prices than it advertised, California officials announced last week.

The lawsuit alleged the home improvement store was engaging in “scanner violations,” meaning Home Depot would charge a different amount at checkout than it listed on the item or its shelf tag, according to the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office.

In August, a San Diego judge prohibited the company from engaging in false advertising or price difference postings from posting to point-of-sale and required it to implement a price accuracy program, which forces the company to adhere to the state’s pricing accuracy requirements, forbids price increases on weekends and adds audits and trainings, the DA’s office said.

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Though it’s admitted to no wrongdoing in the settlement, Home Depot must now pay $1.7 million in civil penalties and $277,251 in costs and restitution “to cover investigation costs and support future enforcement of consumer protection laws,” District Attorney George Gascón said.

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