@bob3160 – Yes, I realise that this is a user community, but it’s frustrating when someone keeps summarily dismissing firefly2560’s and my complaints with “you’re not reading it properly” when, if Avast / Digital River are marketing their products here under Australian law, there is no onus on the customer here to read the fine print to check if there might be a tax “gotcha” lurking therein. Merchants in Australia are required to be very transparent about GST, so that’s what customers expect.

@Asyn – I’ll allow Avast the opportunity to show how readily they can respond to a customer complaint without the “incentive” of the customer having raised a stink in a publicly-visible forum. This isn’t just about firefly2560 or myself.

When I noticed that the billing was being done by Digital River Ireland, I originally surmised that the unannounced 10 percent lift in the price at checkout time might be a local consumption tax (like Australia’s GST). My understanding is that Ireland, being an EU member country, is required to have a consumption tax, and that merchants in one EU country are obliged to levy the consumption tax if selling to a customer in another EU country. However, they are not required to levy the consumption tax if selling to a customer in a non-EU country. I’ve had experience of that. I’ve made an online purchase from Germany, and two online purchases from Finland, and in each case the billing showed that my purchases were exempted from their local consumption taxes because I’m in a non-EU country.

The rate of GST (consumption tax) in Australia is 10 percent, so the unannounced 10 percent lift in the price at the last moment coincided with that. Now, it’s possible that Digital River, under their marketing arrangements here, are required to collect GST for the Australian government. If so, fine, but you can see from the screenshot that I posted earlier that they’re not explicitly claiming to be doing that. There’s no mention or itemisation of GST. On the other hand, for all I know, Digital River could be letting Australian customers ASSUME that the 10 percent increase is for GST, but DR could then be pocketing that additional 10 percent themselves.