Shopping Tips

Membership Math: Is Amazon Prime (or Costco) Actually Saving You Money?

Prime, Costco, store loyalty programs-they all promise you'll save. And you can-if you use them enough. For many people, the fee outweighs the benefits. Doing the maths before you subscribe (or renew) avoids paying for a membership you don't really need.

Why Memberships Feel Like a Win

Memberships tap into loss aversion and convenience:

That can lead to more spending, not less. The membership only saves you if the benefits exceed the cost.

How to Work Out If It Pays Off

Compare:

  1. Annual fee (e.g. Prime, Costco).
  2. What you'd save vs. buying the same things elsewhere (including shipping, if applicable).
  3. How often you'd use it-rough orders per year, or trips to the warehouse.

If (savings × usage) > fee, the membership can make sense. If not, you're paying for peace of mind-or habit-not savings.

Prime, Costco, and Store Loyalty

Prime: Free shipping pays off if you'd otherwise pay for shipping often enough that the total shipping cost exceeds the Prime fee. But Amazon isn't always the cheapest-compare. If you're choosing Prime for convenience, that's fine; just don't assume you're saving.

Costco: Bulk pricing and Kirkland quality can beat supermarkets-if you use the volumes and actually need what you buy. The maths only works if you shop there regularly and don't overbuy.

Store loyalty: Free to join; rewards and member prices can add up. But they also tie you to one retailer. Compare member prices with what you'd pay elsewhere-sometimes the "discount" still isn't the best deal.

Find the Best Deal: Compare First, Then Subscribe

FindPrices helps you compare prices across retailers-so you know when a membership is actually saving you money.

Compare Pricing Now - It's Free

When to Skip or Cancel

Consider cancelling (or not renewing) when:

Conclusion

Memberships can save you money-but only if the benefits exceed the cost for your actual behaviour. Run the numbers, compare prices, and cancel if it doesn't add up.

About the Author

Ben is the founder of FindPrices and has cancelled more memberships than he's kept. Connect on LinkedIn.