| Tom Campbell |
Aug 21st, 2002 02:10 PM |
Retail establishments in Germany are tightly regulated by law.<BR>Until about 3 years ago, all stores had to close by 6PM on weeknights, opened at 10AM and closed at 2PM on Saturdays, and remain closed on Sundays.<BR>The laws now allow stores to remain open until 8PM on weekdays, and from 10AM to 4PM on Saturdays. Sundays are still closed. This includes department stores AND grocery stores.<BR>Since the change only occured a few years ago, you cannot safely expect stores to be open all the way until 8PM or 4PM - check first since many shopkeepers and stores have kept the old hours.<BR>Exceptions: Gas stations, video stores, and similar types of services may stay open later. <BR>Additionally, some bold store owners keep longer hours, but they are fined for doing so. Occasionally a number of stores in a shopping district will also decide to break the law for a specific weekend and stay open longer hours (and pay the fines).<BR>During the holidays, the laws are relaxed for longer hours - although most states still prevent Sunday hours.<BR>Another interesting point - sales are regulated too. <BR>Pricing is generally regulated so that prices are the same among competitors. Larger chains get around this by having manufacturers create custom model numbers (this is why ProMarkt and Saturn never carry the same models). <BR>Also, only two official sale periods are allowed, one in the fall and one in the spring. Sales held outside those times result in fines. <BR>All in all, it's pretty nice for shop owners, but a pain for consumers. <BR>One final piece of advice - do NOT wait until 3:45 to take your items to the checkout on a Saturday afternoon. Elbows get thrown around, and tempers flare. A nasty scene all around.
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