CHOICE has been calling out poor products, services and companies with our Shonky Awards for almost 20 years
Recent recipients range from household appliances and food products to major retailers and airlines
The extra scrutiny we've put on brands has led to products being discontinued, consumers being compensated and changes across industries
For 65 years, CHOICE has helped everyday Australians sort the good products and services from the bad.
It’s the latter that we’re particularly interested in shining a light on, and this mission was the driving force behind our first ever Shonky Awards in 2006.
Our 2025 list will be another roll call of goods and services you’ll definitely want to avoid, so follow us on Facebook and Instagram to catch it when it drops.
Close to 140 Shonky Awards later…
Since launching the Shonkys, we’ve given out 138 of these lemon-shaped awards to businesses and products for a range of reasons – from being simply misleading to downright dangerous.
The Shonkys raise awareness of these products and services and, as you’ll see below, put pressure on businesses and government to ensure that what we consume is safe, suitable and effective.
Over the years, they’ve helped lead to some solid wins for consumers – here are ten of those victories.
Facebook’s parent company cracked down on scam ads after we gave it a Shonky.
It came after Australians lost $95 million to scams on social media in 2023 – almost 250% more than in 2020.
Considering its significant resources and control of the platforms that criminals were using to contact victims, we argued Meta could do more to crack down on scams.
We also criticised the company for appearing to take money from scammers, whose advertisements for fake investment schemes and other cons were appearing on Meta platforms.
Less than a month after finding itself with a Shonky, Meta announced anyone wanting to advertise financial services to Australians on its platforms would have to pass a new verification process designed to weed out scammers.
Then, in February this year, the federal parliament stepped up its response, passing legislation to establish the Scams Prevention Framework (SPF).
Following our own experiment in the CHOICE kitchen, we discovered that green food colouring was the only thing giving these juices their healthy hue.
Both juices and the Steggles nuggets have now been discontinued.
3. Grocery giants humbled
CHOICE was ahead of the curve in 2023 when we awarded Coles and Woolworths a Shonky for recording billion dollar profits during a cost-of-living crisis and deploying confusing specials promotions in their aisles.
Consumer anger was palpable, with over 60% of shoppers we surveyed believing the retail giants were profiting from hiking prices, when more and more people were struggling to keep up with rising living costs.
Australia’s largest supermarkets got a Shonky for huge profits in a cost-of-living crisis.
Bestowing the retailers with a shared Shonky Award helped kick off a year of reckoning for both supermarkets.
In 2024, the ACCC conducted an inquiry into competition in the grocery sector and how retailers set their prices.
In March this year, its final report made 20 recommendations, including the requirement for supermarkets to display clearer pricing information, verifiable discounts and notifications when package sizes change.
The federal government backed the recommendations and is currently considering how to strengthen pricing codes to make some of these changes happen.
In the years since, we’ve said Australians deserve the right to travel refunds that are easy to obtain, and an airline ombuds scheme with the power to independently decide on complaints.
5. Harvey Norman called out for misleading customers
In 2020, we gave Harvey Norman a Shonky for its practice of signing customers up to credit cards from Latitude Finance to let them buy products under interest-free deals.
We highlighted Harvey Norman’s deals with Latitude Finance back in 2020.
With the interest rates on these cards among the highest we’d ever seen, we argued Harvey Norman’s penchant for distributing them without making sure customers could cover the cost was driving people into debt.
In October last year, the Federal Court ruled that by promoting these deals, Harvey Norman and Latitude had misled consumers by obscuring the fact they would have to take out a Latitude credit card.
With Harvey Norman and Latitude’s latest appeals against this ruling dismissed in September, regulators are still seeking penalties from both companies.
Portable and household cots have had to comply with mandatory regulations for decades, and as of next year, so will all other infant sleep products, such as bassinets.
Designed to make portacots and other sleep products safer in the wake of our testing, our experts say these new mandatory standards could lead to better products on our shelves.
7. Faulty florist fined
Online flower delivery service Bloomex is another dodgy operator that’s found regulators hot on its heels after being the recipient of a Shonky.
We gave online florist Bloomex a Shonky for flowers that failed to live up to expectations.
The ACCC launched Federal Court proceedings against the florist in December 2022, accusing it of publishing misleading reviews and prices on its website.
The scrutiny came one month after we delivered Bloomex a Shonky for accepting orders it couldn’t fulfil and delivering some customers flowers that were dead on arrival.
In March last year, the ACCC ordered the florist to pay $1 million in penalties for making false and misleading representations on its site.
8. Wasteful washer-dryer canned
Samsung has received multiple nominations over the years, but its 2017 nod was for selling a washer/dryer combo that was nothing more than a $3000 lemon.
Testing in the CHOICE labs revealed it used a massive 210 litres of water and took six-and-a-half hours to dry a load.
Samsung discontinued the model shortly afterwards.
This was possible because it conveniently hadn’t come up with a standard definition of what counted as a flood, meaning lots of policies included various carve-outs that left many people without cover.
A year later, the federal government took action and amended insurance regulations to finally include a standard definition of flood.
Text-only accessible version
CHOICE Shonkys number crunch
19 October, 2006 – The very first Shonky Awards
138 – Number of Shonkys awarded since then (including one special mention)
Percentage of winners per industry
Household products – 23%
Food and drink – 22%
Banking – 17%
Health – 9%
Miscellaneous – 9%
Travel – 5%
Tech – 4%
Children’s products – 3%
Energy – 2%
Insurance –2%
Telco – 2%
Retail – 2%
Car – 2%
Shonkiest quote – “We don’t consider wholemeal flour to be a characterising ingredient in wholemeal bread” – Bread manufacturer, CHOICE September 2006
$246.24 – Price of a Green and Clean ‘bottled air’ 12-pack (2016 Shonky)
$189 – price of a KitchenAid 2-Slice KMT2116 toaster that failed to turn bread into toast (2018 Shonky)
3000x – How much more than water Cuddly Sensitive Hypoallergenic fabric softener costs, despite performing worse (2017 Shonky)
0% – Percentage of gin, tonic or lime in a Gin and Tonic with a Squeeze of Lime drink (2006 Shonky)
16 – number of serves in a 400g Toblerone bar, with only 15 triangular pieces (2012 Shonky)
55.5% – Percentage of AMP’s superannuation customer base with inactive super accounts (2019 Shonky)
Liam Kennedy is a Journalist with the Editorial and investigations team. He answers consumers' most burning questions, from which scams to be aware of and how to save money, to whether new services and products are worth using and how the latest developments in consumer news could affect them.
Prior to CHOICE, Liam worked in production in daily news radio and podcasting.
Liam has a Bachelor of Communication (Journalism) and a Bachelor of Arts in International Studies from the University of Technology Sydney.
Find Liam on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Liam Kennedy is a Journalist with the Editorial and investigations team. He answers consumers' most burning questions, from which scams to be aware of and how to save money, to whether new services and products are worth using and how the latest developments in consumer news could affect them.
Prior to CHOICE, Liam worked in production in daily news radio and podcasting.
Liam has a Bachelor of Communication (Journalism) and a Bachelor of Arts in International Studies from the University of Technology Sydney.
Find Liam on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Margaret Rafferty joined CHOICE in 2018 as a Content editor and since then has filled the roles of Commissioning editor, Managing editor and now Editorial consultant. Margaret has written on a wide variety of topics and enjoys making complex subjects easy to understand.
With over 20 years of media experience, Margaret brings a strong storytelling background to CHOICE. She works closely with people across the organisation to help tell stories that make a positive difference to people.
Margaret is passionate about uncovering bad practices and helping Australians understand how to avoid falling victim to shonky products and services.
Find Margaret on LinkedIn.
Margaret Rafferty joined CHOICE in 2018 as a Content editor and since then has filled the roles of Commissioning editor, Managing editor and now Editorial consultant. Margaret has written on a wide variety of topics and enjoys making complex subjects easy to understand.
With over 20 years of media experience, Margaret brings a strong storytelling background to CHOICE. She works closely with people across the organisation to help tell stories that make a positive difference to people.
Margaret is passionate about uncovering bad practices and helping Australians understand how to avoid falling victim to shonky products and services.
Find Margaret on LinkedIn.
For more than 60 years, we've been making a difference for Australian consumers. In that time, we've never taken ads or sponsorship.
Instead we're funded by members who value expert reviews and independent product testing.
With no self-interest behind our advice, you don't just buy smarter, you get the answers that you need.
You know without hesitation what's safe for you and your family. And our recent sunscreens test showed just how important it is to keep business claims in check.
So you'll never be alone when something goes wrong or a business treats you unfairly.