B&Q Trust Score: 76 out of 100 (Grade B) - Atop Legal marketplace trust review
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B&Q Review 2026: Is B&Q Legit & Safe?

Trust Score: 76/100 (B — Trustworthy with Care)

Reviewed by: Atop Legal Editorial Team | Last updated: June 6, 2026

Disclosure: This review contains affiliate links. We may earn a commission if you make a purchase through our links, at no extra cost to you. This does not affect our Trust Score or editorial opinion. Learn more.

Quick Verdict

B&Q is unquestionably legitimate: founded in 1969 by Richard Block and David Quayle, it is the UK’s largest home-improvement retailer and a wholly owned subsidiary of FTSE-100-listed Kingfisher plc, which reported £12.88bn group revenue for 2025/26. With 318 stores across the UK and Ireland, 21,000-plus staff, a 90-day returns policy and click-and-collect, the fundamentals are blue-chip. The cautions are real, though: online shoppers rate diy.com poorly — Trustpilot sits at 3.1/5 with half of roughly 31,000 reviews at one star — refund delays are a recurring theme, and its 1,100-seller marketplace was flagged by Which? in June 2026 for listing dangerous knock-off phone chargers. Buy first-party items with confidence; apply more scrutiny to third-party listings.

Trust Score Breakdown

DimensionScoreNotes
Infrastructure & Security17/20Trading since 1969 with 318 UK and Ireland stores, 21,000-plus staff and Kingfisher’s group logistics behind diy.com, the infrastructure is mature — the 2019 unsecured-database incident is the one security blot.
Business Legitimacy19/20B&Q is a wholly owned subsidiary of FTSE-100-listed Kingfisher plc (LSE: KGF; £12.88bn group revenue in FY2025/26) and is the UK’s largest home-improvement retailer, so its legitimacy is beyond doubt.
User Feedback10/20The independent consensus is genuinely weak: Trustpilot 3.1/5 across roughly 31,000 reviews (50% one-star vs 33% five-star), Reviews.io 2.18/5 and ComplaintsBoard 2.6/5, with refund delays and unresponsive service the recurring themes.
Data Protection14/20No customer payment-card breach is on record, but in January 2019 B&Q left about 70,000 theft-incident records — including suspected shoplifters’ names — on an unsecured server and took roughly two weeks to pull it offline; no ICO fine followed.
Marketplace Factors16/20A 90-day returns window, 14-day refund processing and in-store returns for many marketplace items are strong, but the 1,100-seller marketplace drew a June 2026 Which? warning over dangerous knock-off phone chargers, and recalls (GoodHome fridge-freezers, Nubia shower screens) dent the record.

Pros

  • Owned by FTSE-100 Kingfisher plc; trading since 1969
  • 318 UK & Ireland stores for click & collect and easy returns
  • 90-day returns on unused items, refunds within 14 days
  • Group revenue of £12.88bn in FY2025/26 with profit up 6%
  • Marketplace sellers vetted, with many items returnable in store

Cons

  • Trustpilot only 3.1/5 from ~31,000 reviews, with 50% one-star
  • Reviews.io score just 2.18/5; slow refunds a recurring complaint
  • Which? (June 2026) found dangerous knock-off chargers on its marketplace
  • 2019 leak exposed ~70,000 theft-incident records on an unsecured server
  • Recent safety recalls, incl. GoodHome fridge-freezers (fire risk)

How We Assessed B&Q

We verified B&Q’s corporate background and current trading through Kingfisher plc’s FY2025/26 full-year results and its London Stock Exchange listing, alongside 2025-26 retail-press coverage. We aggregated independent customer feedback from Trustpilot (roughly 31,000 reviews), Reviews.io and ComplaintsBoard, and checked the breach, recall and regulatory record, including the 2019 data-exposure incident and the June 2026 Which? marketplace-safety investigation. The Trust Score and breakdown above reflect this combined evidence; see our Trust Score methodology for the full rubric and sources.

Is B&Q Legit or Safe?

Yes — B&Q is a legitimate, long-established retailer, not a scam: it has traded since 1969, is owned by London-listed Kingfisher plc and operates 318 real stores, so orders on diy.com are backed by a substantial UK business and a 90-day returns policy. The practical risks are service-related rather than fraud-related. Items sold and shipped by B&Q itself are the safest bet; for the 1,100-plus third-party marketplace sellers, check the “sold by” name before paying, avoid cheap unbranded electricals — Which? found dangerous knock-off chargers there in June 2026 — and confirm the seller’s returns terms. Pay by credit or debit card for chargeback protection, keep receipts, and if a refund stalls (the most common complaint), escalate in writing and cite B&Q’s 14-day refund commitment. For related options, compare our IKEA review and Argos review.

See where B&Q ranks in Best Online Marketplaces 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is B&Q legit?

Yes. B&Q is a legitimate, operating marketplace — not a scam. Atop Legal rates it 76/100 (Grade B, trustworthy with some caveats) using our five-dimension Trust Score methodology covering infrastructure security, business legitimacy, user feedback, data protection and marketplace-specific safeguards.

Is B&Q safe to buy from?

B&Q is generally safe when you take normal precautions. Use the platform's built-in buyer protection, pay on-platform, and check seller ratings before ordering. Our full Trust Score breakdown above explains the rating in detail.

Is B&Q a scam?

No. B&Q is a real, registered business, not a scam. Like any marketplace it has strengths and weaknesses — which our review documents — but you can shop on it and obtain refunds through its buyer-protection process.

What is B&Q's Atop Legal Trust Score?

B&Q scores 76 out of 100 (Grade B) in Atop Legal's 2026 assessment. The score is the sum of five 0–20 dimension scores; see the breakdown above and our methodology for how it is calculated.

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