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Business-to-business contracts made electronically

If you're selling goods or services to a business customer electronically, e.g. online via a website, there are legal regulations that cover both business-to-business and business-to-consumer contracts.

Under these regulations, you must provide certain pre-contract information to your customer. There are also requirements about how the sale is conducted electronically.

Information requirements

Before an order is placed, you must provide the following information in a way that's easily and permanently accessible:

  • Your name and geographic address
  • Your contact details so a customer can contact you quickly and effectively, including your email address
  • If you're registered in a trade or other publicly available register (including the Register of Companies), details of the register and your registration number or other means of identifying you on the register
  • If you're subject to an authorisation scheme, details of the relevant supervisory authority
  • If you're a member of a regulated professional body, details of that body, your professional title, together with a reference to the professional rules that govern you and the means to access them
  • The price, whether it includes tax and delivery costs, and the relevant VAT number
  • Unless you've agreed otherwise with your customer, any relevant codes of conduct governing you, and where they can be accessed
  • For electronic contracts (unless the customer has agreed otherwise):
    • the different technical steps that need to be followed to conclude the contract electronically
    • whether you'll file the contract and how it'll be accessible
    • the technical steps to follow to identify and correct errors in the ordering process
    • the languages in which the contract can be made.

Other requirements

If you're concluding a contract with another business by electronic means other than by email, you must:

  • Acknowledge, without delay and by electronic means, that you've received the order; and
  • Give the customer the chance to identify and correct any input errors before they place the order.

This will be the case unless you agree otherwise with your customer.

Related services

What is the law guide

The Desktop Lawyer law guide aims to present the law to you in a comprehensive yet jargon-free and easy-to-read format. Our law guide is constantly kept up to date with changes in business and family law by our team of in house solicitors, and includes information across all the legal jurisdictions in the UK.

Our law guide is free to use. Where we provide documents related to this area of law, or where they may help you with any legal issue in this area, they will be listed to the right of this message.

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