This paper argues for the doctrinal evolution of the invitation to offer in contract law, as established in Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Boots Cash Chemists (1953), whose context-dependent reasoning has since been applied as a general rule beyond the conditions that originally justified it. It contends that modern pricing mechanisms, across both physical and digital commerce, frequently operate not as passive invitations but as dominant inducements that objectively manifest an intention to be bound. To address this shift, the paper introduces the Price Dominance Test, establishing the Price Dominance Doctrine as a narrowly tailored, contextual subset within the existing framework of offer and acceptance. The analysis identifies a critical “Formation Gap” where current statutory remedies worldwide function only as ex-post punitive measures, failing to address the ex-ante contractual status of such price representations. It argues that contract law itself must evolve to bind sellers to their inducements at the point of formation where price functions as a fixed commitment trigger, rather than relying on regulatory penalties after the fact, thereby offering a coherent doctrinal framework applicable across common law jurisdictions.
Utkarsh Tiwari (Sun,) studied this question.