Competitor pricing analysis compares visible price, packages, fees, discounts, guarantees, payment terms, included value, and buying friction so you can choose whether to adjust price, packaging, proof, or positioning.
What you need before you start
- A specific product, package, service, or buying moment.
- Competitor pricing pages, menus, quote forms, product pages, booking pages, ads, or local listings.
- Your current price, margin limits, and what is included.
- A way to mark prices as visible, hinted, hidden, or quote-only.
Step-by-step process
- 01
Separate price from package
Record the number, but also what the customer gets: scope, quantity, speed, support, guarantee, materials, delivery, or extras.
- 02
Capture hidden and indirect costs
Look for setup fees, delivery, taxes, tips, cancellation rules, minimum commitments, add-ons, maintenance, and payment processing.
- 03
Watch how price is framed
Note monthly vs one-time, starting at, from, per person, per visit, per project, bundle savings, comparison anchors, and free trial language.
- 04
Compare risk reducers
Guarantees, reviews, warranties, free consultations, trial classes, returns, and proof can support a higher price or reduce hesitation.
- 05
Decide the pricing move
You may not need to lower price. You may need clearer packages, a starter option, a premium option, better proof, or a cleaner explanation.
Competitor pricing comparison table
Use one row per comparable offer. Do not compare your premium package against a competitor's stripped-down starter offer.
| Offer | Visible price | Included | Extra costs | Risk reducer | Pricing signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter package | $99 | Core service | Travel fee | Reviews | Accessible entry point |
| Standard package | $189 | Core plus extras | None visible | Guarantee | Best-value anchor |
| Premium package | Quote only | Custom scope | Unknown | Consultation | Positioned as tailored |
Filled example: home cleaning service
A cleaning business compares recurring cleaning packages before changing how it explains price.
| Competitor | Price cue | Included | Hidden friction | Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clean A | $120 starting price | 2-hour clean | Add-ons unclear | Publish standard checklist and add-on menu |
| Clean B | Quote form only | Custom plan | No instant range | Show typical ranges before form |
| Clean C | Membership discount | Recurring visits | Cancellation policy vague | Add recurring plan with clear terms |
Common mistakes
- Comparing prices without comparing what is included.
- Assuming hidden competitor pricing means the competitor has no pricing strategy.
- Lowering your price before improving proof, packages, or explanation.
- Ignoring guarantees, financing, shipping, and cancellation rules.
- Building too many price tiers because competitors have them.
What to do next
- Mark every competitor price as visible, hidden, range, quote-only, or package-based.
- Rewrite your own package names and included items so they are easier to compare.
- Add proof near your price if competitors look safer.
- Track price and discount changes monthly if customers are price sensitive.
Make price easier to compare
Use the pricing worksheet to compare real offers and decide whether your next move is price, package, proof, or positioning.
Questions people ask
Should competitor pricing determine my price?
No. It should inform your price, package, proof, and positioning. Your costs, margin, demand, capacity, and customer segment still matter.
What if competitors do not publish prices?
Record the pricing model as hidden or quote-only and analyze what the customer must do next. That friction can become your opportunity.
How often should I check competitor pricing?
For stable local services, monthly or quarterly is enough. For ecommerce, seasonal offers, and ad-driven categories, check more often.