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Many major retailers attempt to compete with Amazonās upcoming Prime Day (Walmart+ Week, for example) and of course, each one wants you to think their deals are the best of the bestābut it's often a smoke screen. Amazon, in particular, has been caught in a lawsuit since last September by the Federal Trade Commission and 17 states, alleging it inflated prices on their products using an algorithm.
In other words, if you have a hunch that the price for a ādealā on Amazon was actually cheaper in the past, you may be right: One study from 2022 revealed questionable tactics deployed by Amazon to trick consumers into thinking they are getting a deal when, in reality, the savings are negligible, at bestāand even higher than before, at worst.
The trick is called āprice-increase and list-price synchronization.ā Basically, a seller disguises a price increase as a discount by increasing an itemās ālist priceā (the original price) and then slashing that list price to show you a āsale priceā that might even be higher than the original price.
Hereās how this might play out in practice: Say Amazon lists a television for $500. Then, one day, the āList Priceā becomes $600 with a slash through it. Amazon then bumps the TV to $550. A blissfully unaware buyer might be tricked into thinking theyāre saving $50 when, in reality, theyāre overpaying for the TV.
When I reached out to Amazon about the study, I received this response from a spokesperson: āAmazon provides clear and accurate pricing information on our product pages. This study was conducted more than five years ago, and doesnāt accurately represent the shopping experience today. We continually work to help customers make more informed purchase decisions and have since evolved how we describe pricing information.ā
Take this 2020 Apple MacBook Air laptop, though. Back in October 2022, it was listed as $998 with a āPrime Exclusive Dealā where you are āsaving 17%ā or $200 off from the $1,198 ālist price.ā But when we look at the MacBookās price history on Camelcamelcamel, a price tracking page, hereās what we find:
Screenshot from camelcamelcamel.com Credit: camelcamelcamel.com
Although it is discounted from its then-lowest price, the chart above shows the MacBookās list price was never the claimed $1,198. Later, the price of the laptop conveniently rose just before Amazonās Prime Early Access Sale on October 11, 2022, only to then be discounted again for the event. Itās still the cheapest price of the year at $998, but itās not as sweet of a deal as that new, higher ālist priceā would make it seem.
There is no official market value for any item since the free market sets the price of any good, so the practices by Amazon and others are not illegal. However, that doesnāt mean you have to be fooled. To avoid falling into this trap, make sure to use price-tracking pages like Camelcamelcamel for Amazon or Honey for major online retailers on deals you feel seem suspicious. Look at their price history to make sure that ādealā is actually a deal.
Full story here:
In other words, if you have a hunch that the price for a ādealā on Amazon was actually cheaper in the past, you may be right: One study from 2022 revealed questionable tactics deployed by Amazon to trick consumers into thinking they are getting a deal when, in reality, the savings are negligible, at bestāand even higher than before, at worst.
The trick is called āprice-increase and list-price synchronization.ā Basically, a seller disguises a price increase as a discount by increasing an itemās ālist priceā (the original price) and then slashing that list price to show you a āsale priceā that might even be higher than the original price.
Hereās how this might play out in practice: Say Amazon lists a television for $500. Then, one day, the āList Priceā becomes $600 with a slash through it. Amazon then bumps the TV to $550. A blissfully unaware buyer might be tricked into thinking theyāre saving $50 when, in reality, theyāre overpaying for the TV.
When I reached out to Amazon about the study, I received this response from a spokesperson: āAmazon provides clear and accurate pricing information on our product pages. This study was conducted more than five years ago, and doesnāt accurately represent the shopping experience today. We continually work to help customers make more informed purchase decisions and have since evolved how we describe pricing information.ā
Take this 2020 Apple MacBook Air laptop, though. Back in October 2022, it was listed as $998 with a āPrime Exclusive Dealā where you are āsaving 17%ā or $200 off from the $1,198 ālist price.ā But when we look at the MacBookās price history on Camelcamelcamel, a price tracking page, hereās what we find:
Screenshot from camelcamelcamel.com Credit: camelcamelcamel.com
Although it is discounted from its then-lowest price, the chart above shows the MacBookās list price was never the claimed $1,198. Later, the price of the laptop conveniently rose just before Amazonās Prime Early Access Sale on October 11, 2022, only to then be discounted again for the event. Itās still the cheapest price of the year at $998, but itās not as sweet of a deal as that new, higher ālist priceā would make it seem.
There is no official market value for any item since the free market sets the price of any good, so the practices by Amazon and others are not illegal. However, that doesnāt mean you have to be fooled. To avoid falling into this trap, make sure to use price-tracking pages like Camelcamelcamel for Amazon or Honey for major online retailers on deals you feel seem suspicious. Look at their price history to make sure that ādealā is actually a deal.
Full story here: