PIZZA fans are cheesed off after Domino’s introduced a £2 delivery fee.

The charge, previously free, applies to orders under £35.

Pizza fans are cheesed off after Domino’s introduced a £2 delivery fee

2

Pizza fans are cheesed off after Domino’s introduced a £2 delivery fee
The charge, previously free, applies to orders under £35

2

The charge, previously free, applies to orders under £35

The fast-food giant announced pre-tax profits of £109million last week but is blaming rising costs.

One angry customer tweeted: “Just placed an order online as I do every week and was shocked and very annoyed to see that you now charge a £2 delivery fee.

“This will be the very last time I use Domino’s. £2 is normally the tip I give the delivery driver.”

Another added: “I always tip delivery drivers £2. I’m not going to pay £4 so the driver won’t get the usual tip which is frustrating.”

Domino's Pizza's logo has 3 dots for a reason –the meaning isn't so obvious
How a Domino's pizza exposed chef's $2m con - after ex vowed to make dog immortal

Martyn James, of consumer campaign group Resolver, said so-called micro charges — a small fee for something that used to be free — are the latest “rip-off” fees that shoppers should watch for.

He said: “The theory is that most people miss them or don’t bother to complain because it’s too much hassle. But £2 per transaction adds up.”

Domino’s said delivery charges, minimum spend and the free delivery threshold are all set by stores, which are run as franchises.

It said the majority charge under £2, and it is 99p with some.

Most read in The Sun

Last week Domino’s UK arm revealed a rise in profits driven by a surge in sales.

The £109.7million pre-tax profits to December 26 are up from £98.9million the previous year.

‘Hero’ P&O captain locks himself on ship & bars cops from coming aboard
Josie Gibson stunned as Love Island's Chris Hughes insults her at Cheltenham

The firm said it is expecting more cost inflation this year, as wheat prices surge in response to the Ukraine war.

Operations director Nicola Frampton said: “Domino’s is facing increased labour, fuel and food costs. Our charges are low compared to many of our competitors.”

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The freelancers facing tax bills bigger than their total income

Last year, Paul Husband was photographing music stars and earning enough to…

Odey crisis deepens as hedge fund dives again

The flagship hedge fund run by millionaire Tory donor Crispin Odey slumped…

I was evicted from my newbuild block of flats three years ago after ‘cracks’ were found – I’m £500,000 in debt

A DAD who was evicted from his newbuild block of flats three…

Pound plummets against euro as Brexit talks enter ‘critical stage’

THE pound has plummeted against the dollar and euro as Boris Johnson…