Supermarket chains in Israel are increasingly selling iPhones, robot vacuums, TVs and other electronics, sometimes for hundreds or even thousands of shekels less than the official importer. The article says many shoppers do not realize these deals are often parallel imports, and only discover the difference when they try to use the warranty.
The price gap can be substantial. One example cited is the Dreame X50, sold by the official importer for about 3,850 shekels, while supermarket chains offer it for under 3,000 shekels. Another Dreame model is also shown in the article as part of the broader trend of discounted imports through food retailers.
The main criticism is that the parallel-import status is not displayed clearly enough next to the price. Although a required sticker appears on the packaging, the article says most shoppers do not notice it and leave believing they bought the same product sold by the official importer, with the same service and support. Consumer advocates argue that if customers only learn about the difference after a malfunction, they did not receive the full information needed to make an informed purchase.
Under official-import products, warranty service is provided by the brand’s authorized importer, through its formal support network. With parallel imports, the warranty comes from the parallel importer or a workshop acting for it, and the supermarket is not the point of contact if something goes wrong. The Consumer Council says it received dozens of complaints in the past six months about warranty, service and defects in products bought from retail chains, even as regulators say there is no legal duty to highlight parallel import on the shelf sign because the information appears on the product itself. The article concludes that this may be legally disclosed, but not presented in a way that clearly tells shoppers what they are buying before checkout.