
Opaque Pricing
Opaque pricing is a way that companies can sell their merchandise at hidden, lower prices. Other techniques of opaque pricing include charging a high starting price and then lowering price through age-based discounts (movie tickets for kids and senior citizens), channel-based discounts (online versus offline), volume discounts (frequent flyer programs), and geography-based pricing differences (enterprise software). The market clearing price for products usually still leaves a seller with excess inventory — open seats on a flight, for example. For example, airlines offer first-class seats at a dramatically higher price per unit of space consumed — the buyer gets more space and the prestige of flying in first class and the airline gets an order of magnitude higher revenue per customer for the same flight — often 10x more. Opaque pricing allows companies to sell products or services at hidden, lower prices. Other opaque pricing techniques include age-based discounts, channel-based discounts, volume discounts, and geography-based pricing differences. Opaque pricing is a type of price discrimination, with the target customer being the one who will purchase a product or service primarily based on price (price-conscious customer) — and not based on the company’s amenities, reputation, etc.

What Is Opaque Pricing?
Opaque pricing is a way that companies can sell their merchandise at hidden, lower prices. Opaque pricing is a type of price discrimination, with the target customer being the one who will purchase a product or service primarily based on price (price-conscious customer) — and not based on the company’s amenities, reputation, etc.



How Opaque Pricing Works
The opaque pricing strategy is popular in the travel industry. Websites like Hotwire and Priceline use it to sell unsold hotel rooms, airline tickets, and car rentals. Customers who wish to take advantage of an opaque pricing structure visit a website which offers hidden rates, choose their location, dates, and (for hotels) star-rating. After paying, the website will reveal the name of the hotel but doesn’t allow for refunds, changes, or cancellations.
Opaque pricing benefits hotels because they can sell otherwise empty rooms without damaging brand integrity. In addition, once reserved, the hotel has guaranteed revenue for that room as the reservation can’t be modified.
The big benefit of opaque pricing used by hotels is that it allows them to sell otherwise empty rooms without damaging brand integrity.
Benefits of Opaque Pricing
While a seller would ideally like to charge the maximum price a buyer is willing to pay, the seller doesn’t actually know what that maximum is. And the buyer has no incentive to tell, as anyone who has haggled with a car salesman well knows.
This is why sellers create segmented offerings as a way to get at least some customers to pay more. For example, airlines offer first-class seats at a dramatically higher price per unit of space consumed — the buyer gets more space and the prestige of flying in first class and the airline gets an order of magnitude higher revenue per customer for the same flight — often 10x more.
Types of Opaque Pricing
Other techniques of opaque pricing include charging a high starting price and then lowering price through age-based discounts (movie tickets for kids and senior citizens), channel-based discounts (online versus offline), volume discounts (frequent flyer programs), and geography-based pricing differences (enterprise software).
Special Considerations
The market clearing price for products usually still leaves a seller with excess inventory — open seats on a flight, for example. However, the marginal cost of that inventory is often so low that it is usually possible to sell it for a profit, but doing so means that people who would have bought the product at a higher price will now pay less and aggregate revenue will decrease. By selling a hotel room through a bundled vacation package, a seller dramatically decreases the likelihood of cannibalizing their own revenue.
Related terms:
Big-Ticket Item
A big-ticket item is a high-priced item, such as a house or car. In the context of retail stores, they may also refer to products with selling prices and profit margins that are significantly higher than those of other items in the stores. read more
Cancellation
A cancellation is a notice sent by a broker to a client, informing them than an erroneous trade has been made and is being rectified. read more
Congestion Pricing
Congestion pricing is a dynamic pricing strategy that attempts to regulate demand by increasing prices without increasing supply. read more
Disintermediation
Disintermediation is the removal of a middleman in the supply chain to allow producers to sell directly to their customers. read more
Fee
A fee is a fixed price charged for a specific service and is paid in lieu of a salary. A fee can also be additional charges on a good or service. read more
Geographical Pricing
Geographical pricing is adjusting an item's sale price based on location to reflect shipping costs or to meet the market-clearing price in that area. read more
Market Cannibalization
Market cannibalization is a loss in sales caused by a company's introduction of a new product that displaces one or more of its own older products. 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
Price Discrimination
Price discrimination is a pricing strategy that charges customers different prices for the same product or service. read more
Satellite Operation
A satellite operation is a small office or branch office in a different location from a company or government agency's main office. read more