
Geographical Pricing
Geographical pricing is the practice of adjusting an item's sale price based on the location of the buyer. The product may sell poorly as it sold at a higher price compared to competitors, or the seller could run a marketing campaign positioning the product as a higher quality luxury item, thereby justifying the higher price. A price taker is a company or individual that has to settle for whatever price the market has determined for the product, as they lack the market share or influence to determine the price. Aside from excise taxes, the wholesale price, and thus the retail price, is based on factors such as competition from other gas stations in the area, the amount of traffic the gas station receives, and average household incomes in the area — not on the cost of delivering gas to the area. For example, the seller may decide to sell their product in a location far away and absorb the cost of shipping, thereby pricing the product competitively in a foreign market.

What Is Geographical Pricing?
Geographical pricing is the practice of adjusting an item's sale price based on the location of the buyer. Sometimes the difference in the sale price is based on the cost to ship the item to that location. But the difference may also be based on what amount the people in that location are willing to pay. Companies will try to maximize revenue in the markets in which they operate, and geographical pricing contributes to that goal.



Understanding Geographical Pricing
Most typically, geographical pricing is practiced by companies in order to reflect the different shipping costs accrued when transporting goods to different markets. If a market is closer to where the goods originate, the pricing may be lower than in a faraway market, where the expense to transport the goods is higher. Prices may be lower if the goods compete in a crowded market where consumers have a number of other quality options.
Charging higher prices to account for higher shipping charges to faraway locations can make a seller more competitive, as their products will be available to a larger number of customers. But higher shipping costs may make local customers avoid buying the product that is shipped from far away in favor of cheaper, local products.
Prices are also impacted by whether the manufacturer is a price taker instead of a price maker. A price taker is a company or individual that has to settle for whatever price the market has determined for the product, as they lack the market share or influence to determine the price. A price maker has the market share to set the price.
Geographical Pricing Strategy
It is always up to the seller of the goods to determine how they will price their product and based on that decision, the outcome will vary. For example, the seller may decide to sell their product in a location far away and absorb the cost of shipping, thereby pricing the product competitively in a foreign market. This may result in lower profit margins or no profits at all but may increase brand awareness in the new location for some benefit down the line.
Conversely, the seller may pass the cost of shipping onto the consumer via high prices for the product, which may have many different effects. The product may sell poorly as it sold at a higher price compared to competitors, or the seller could run a marketing campaign positioning the product as a higher quality luxury item, thereby justifying the higher price. In this case, it might only be bought by a small part of the population, but that might be profitable enough.
Special Considerations
Taxes can also be a consideration, even if shipping costs are not a factor. A product made in Massachusetts and sold in Washington may be priced differently than that same good in Oregon. While the shipping costs would be roughly equivalent, the fact that Oregon has no sales tax could lead the company to price the product higher in that state than in Washington, which has one of the highest sales tax rates in the country.
Also, where there may be a supply and demand imbalance in a market, even if a temporary phenomenon, a company may respond by pricing its product or service at a premium or discount in the market versus another geographical spot.
Real-World Example
A type of geographical pricing called "zone pricing" is common in the gasoline industry. This practice entails oil companies charging gas station owners different prices for the same gasoline depending on where their stations are located.
Aside from excise taxes, the wholesale price, and thus the retail price, is based on factors such as competition from other gas stations in the area, the amount of traffic the gas station receives, and average household incomes in the area — not on the cost of delivering gas to the area.
Related terms:
Auction
An auction is a sales event where buyers place competitive bids on assets or services. Read the pros and cons of buying and selling through auctions. read more
Basing Point Pricing System
A basing point pricing system requires buyers to pay a base price, plus a set shipping fee depending on their distance from a specific location. read more
Basing Point and Example
A basing point is the location used in the basing point pricing system, in which the delivered price is the same for every destination in that market. read more
Brand Awareness
Brand awareness is a marketing term that describes the degree of consumer recognition of a product or service by its name. Creating brand awareness is a key step in promoting a new product or reviving an older brand. read more
Excise Tax
An excise tax is an indirect tax charged by the government on the sale of a particular good or service. read more
Law of Supply & Demand
The law of supply and demand explains the interaction between the supply of and demand for a resource, and the effect on its price. read more
Market Basket
A market basket is a subset of products or financial securities designed to mimic the performance of a specific market segment. read more
Market Share
Market share shows the size of a company in relation to its market and its competitors by comparing the company’s sales to total industry sales. read more
Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)
Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) refers to the consolidation of companies or assets through various types of financial transactions. read more
What Is Priced Out?
Priced out is a term used to describe buyers who cannot or will not pay the current market price for a good. read more