A 1-cent change in price can move conversion 8-24% — sometimes in counterintuitive directions. Here is the consolidated pricing-psychology playbook for B2C: charm pricing, decoys, anchors, and price framing tactics that actually move the needle.
Overview
Pricing is one of the highest-leverage variables in B2C marketing — and one of the most behaviorally complex. Small changes to how a price is displayed can swing conversion rates more than significant changes to the underlying value proposition.
Definition
Pricing psychology is the study of how the form of a price (the digits used, the framing, the presence of comparison points) affects perceived value and willingness to pay. The four highest-leverage tactics are charm pricing ($X.99), decoy effect (3-tier pricing where a strategically-bad middle option drives selection of premium), anchoring (showing a higher reference price), and price framing (per-day vs total).
Impact
Field studies have shown $39 outperforms $34 for the same product because $39 anchors as “premium discount” while $34 feels arbitrary. Decoy pricing with a strategically-priced middle tier can lift premium-tier selection by 30-50%. Per-day framing of subscriptions ($2/day vs $60/month) can lift conversion 20-40% in price-sensitive segments.
Case Study
A meal-kit subscription tested 3-tier pricing ($89/$129/$179 per month). They added a strategic 4th tier at $169 that was visibly worse value than the $179 (less food, fewer recipes). Selection of the $179 tier grew from 18% to 41%. Average order value grew $11/month — net annual revenue impact: $4.2M from a single pricing display change.
Best Practices
Use $X.99 endings unless premium positioning requires whole numbers. Show a higher anchor price (MSRP, “was” price) when discounting. Add a decoy tier when offering 3+ pricing options to drive selection of the desired tier. Frame subscription prices in the smallest meaningful unit (per day, per use). Test price endings — sometimes $39 outperforms $35 even though $35 is lower. A/B test pricing changes carefully because they directly affect revenue, not just conversion.
Tools
A/B testing platforms (VWO, Convert), Profitwell or ChartMogul for subscription pricing analytics, Stripe Checkout for testing pricing variants, qualitative tools for willingness-to-pay surveys (Conjointly, PriceIntelligently), and basic spreadsheet modeling for decoy-tier design.
Conclusion
Pricing psychology is the highest-leverage and most-underused tool in most B2C marketing toolkits. The brands that test pricing systematically — at the level of digits, decoys, and framing — consistently outperform peers who treat pricing as a cost-plus calculation. Treat pricing as a creative variable, not a finance variable.
FAQ
Q: Does charm pricing ($X.99) still work in 2026?
A: Yes for most categories. The exceptions are premium and luxury categories where round numbers signal quality and confidence. Test by category.
Q: How big a decoy gap should I create?
A: The decoy should be visibly worse value than the target option but not absurdly so. A 5-15% worse value at the same or higher price typically maximizes the effect.




