But the EU invoicing requirements need to be met for it to be a B2B transaction.
It means a seller has to submit an invoice with both the supplier and buyers
VAT numbers on it, along with other info. Also e-invoicing is required in italy
and a few other countries are making this a requirement in the next few years
for B2B transactions. If the requirements are not met ithe sale defaults to a
B2C transaction. I haven't seen a European bricklink invoice to tell if it
meets EU invoicing requirements.
What could be argued is that BL parts orders are “goods made to order or clearly
personalised.” Those are exempt from the “cooling-off” period.
It used to be that lego.com PAB orders were not returnable. They have changed
their rules so that they are now returnable so long as the whole PAB order is
returned. So if LEGO have relented on their 'no PAB returns' line, presumably
there is some legal reason behind it.
The 'goods made to order' exemption used to be stated on LEGO's website
for Pick a Brick. I'd be highly surprised if it wasn't removed due to
a challenge on right to withdraw.
It's worth noting that right to withdraw only applies to consumers. So if
a seller buys from another seller, distance selling regulations don't apply
in the same way.
[...] The 'goods made to order' exemption used to be stated on LEGO's website for Pick a Brick. I'd be highly surprised if it wasn't removed due to a challenge [...] (2 months ago, Mar 31, 2024, to Help)
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