Nonprofit Religious Organizations
SB 834 protects dealers from retaliation when they disclose MAP and that lower prices may be offered, while letting manufacturers require freight/processing charges in online prici
SB 834 protects dealers from retaliation when they disclose MAP and that lower prices may be offered, while letting manufacturers require freight/processing charges in online prici
Status: Second Reading Passed (Senate)
Introduced: January 28, 2025 (read first time) — Sponsor: Sen. Waldstreicher
Primary subject: Transportation — dealer website pricing and manufacturer-dealer relations
Affected code: Md. Transportation Art., §15‑207(h) (amended) and §15‑313(a),(b) (re‑stated)
Planned effective date in text: October 1, 2025
To protect dealers that disclose certain pricing information on their public websites and to clarify what manufacturers may require about how prices are displayed. The bill aims to increase transparency for consumers while limiting manufacturers’ ability to retaliate against dealers for specific disclosures.
Prohibition on adverse actions for specific disclosures:
Manufacturer ability to require inclusion of certain charges:
Existing advertising prohibitions retained:
SB 834 balances dealer transparency and consumer information against manufacturers’ ability to enforce uniform advertising practices. It prevents manufacturers from taking adverse actions when dealers disclose that a posted price is the manufacturer’s MAP and that lower prices may be offered, while still allowing manufacturers to require inclusion of freight/processing charges and preserving anti‑fraud advertising safeguards.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.