The Japan Times - COSTCO profits from Fees

EUR -
AED 4.193303
AFN 74.207228
ALL 93.672285
AMD 419.417337
ANG 2.044001
AOA 1048.028871
ARS 1698.204573
AUD 1.642168
AWG 2.054958
AZN 1.945326
BAM 1.95347
BBD 2.300097
BDT 140.754567
BGN 1.930382
BHD 0.43048
BIF 3407.804933
BMD 1.141643
BND 1.474154
BOB 7.904547
BRL 5.850323
BSD 1.141958
BTN 108.786188
BWP 15.443766
BYN 3.264435
BYR 22376.206598
BZD 2.29677
CAD 1.615095
CDF 2577.830745
CHF 0.922985
CLF 0.02683
CLP 1055.951907
CNY 7.736859
CNH 7.742641
COP 3713.879474
CRC 519.484884
CUC 1.141643
CUP 30.253545
CVE 110.629671
CZK 24.245538
DJF 202.893278
DKK 7.475142
DOP 67.018889
DZD 152.070344
EGP 56.636124
ERN 17.124648
ETB 181.94943
FJD 2.548951
FKP 0.851539
GBP 0.852083
GEL 3.014384
GGP 0.851539
GHS 13.088985
GIP 0.851539
GMD 83.915171
GNF 10020.777527
GTQ 8.713682
GYD 238.888182
HKD 8.951454
HNL 30.681706
HRK 7.532452
HTG 149.453034
HUF 355.895283
IDR 20626.29591
ILS 3.437378
IMP 0.851539
INR 108.881423
IQD 1496.123405
IRR 1569473.981035
ISK 143.402242
JEP 0.851539
JMD 180.435558
JOD 0.80947
JPY 184.586625
KES 147.523572
KGS 99.835332
KHR 4577.989607
KMF 492.048616
KPW 1027.479274
KRW 1714.628249
KWD 0.353408
KYD 0.951615
KZT 538.362531
LAK 25744.054418
LBP 102234.1484
LKR 383.132981
LRD 207.35099
LSL 18.632052
LTL 3.370976
LVL 0.690569
LYD 7.312269
MAD 10.680117
MDL 20.069006
MGA 4903.357913
MKD 61.632203
MMK 2396.661113
MNT 4093.58572
MOP 9.220417
MRU 45.751395
MUR 53.828909
MVR 17.650236
MWK 1981.892978
MXN 19.957567
MYR 4.650945
MZN 72.955258
NAD 18.632047
NGN 1573.652825
NIO 41.846975
NOK 11.164175
NPR 174.047241
NZD 1.980768
OMR 0.438944
PAB 1.141943
PEN 3.882772
PGK 5.000112
PHP 70.268714
PKR 317.576639
PLN 4.328316
PYG 6942.779137
QAR 4.163235
RON 5.233525
RSD 117.34993
RUB 87.904236
RWF 1674.219744
SAR 4.285517
SBD 9.207399
SCR 16.810537
SDG 685.560934
SEK 11.029335
SGD 1.474655
SHP 0.852352
SLE 27.799435
SLL 23939.691135
SOS 652.453266
SRD 42.937776
STD 23629.709143
STN 24.659493
SVC 9.992212
SYP 126.188217
SZL 18.643455
THB 38.020719
TJS 10.569132
TMT 4.007168
TND 3.360713
TOP 2.748803
TRY 53.637941
TTD 7.758813
TWD 36.670155
TZS 3002.525068
UAH 50.803921
UGX 4202.061196
USD 1.141643
UYU 46.04568
UZS 13716.843354
VES 798.407715
VND 29988.112592
VUV 137.496498
WST 3.161561
XAF 655.181208
XAG 0.019162
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.085348
XCG 2.058163
XDR 0.814162
XOF 653.59483
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.687698
ZAR 18.62918
ZMK 10276.162808
ZMW 20.584536
ZWL 367.608643
  • BCC

    3.8200

    76.06

    +5.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    19.25

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0650

    22.085

    +0.29%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    21.38

    +0.28%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.78

    +0.59%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.59

    +0.33%

  • RIO

    1.0500

    90.54

    +1.16%

  • BTI

    -0.0151

    60.02

    -0.03%

  • RBGPF

    5.8500

    67.35

    +8.69%

  • BP

    0.6500

    39.2

    +1.66%

  • AZN

    -6.8800

    171.61

    -4.01%

  • RELX

    0.3700

    32.44

    +1.14%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.01

    -0.15%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.38

    +0.31%

  • VOD

    1.6400

    14.72

    +11.14%


COSTCO profits from Fees




Costco’s cavernous warehouses and legendary bargain bins hide an unusual business secret: the company makes surprisingly little money from the products rolling through its tills. Instead, the bulk of its earnings come from selling the right to shop there. Shoppers pay annual fees – US$65 for a basic membership or US$130 for an executive tier – and those dues power almost the entire enterprise. Costco’s chief executive has even remarked that the most important item the retailer sells isn’t a giant jar of mayonnaise but the membership card itself.

A Subscription Model in Disguise
While rival supermarkets mark up goods by 25 % to 50 %, Costco keeps its average merchandise markup at around 11 %, essentially passing most of the savings to customers. After wages and utilities are accounted for, the retailer retains only a fraction of its sales as profit. In its 2025 fiscal year the company generated roughly US$270 billion in net sales but just over US$5 billion in operating income before taxes. What makes the model work are those membership dues. More than 80 million paid memberships produced about US$5.3 billion in revenue in the year ending August 2025, a figure that was almost pure profit. Renewal rates remain extraordinarily high – above 92 % in the United States and nearly 90 % globally. In essence, the fee income covers Costco’s overhead, allowing it to sell goods at razor‑thin margins and still generate solid earnings.

Winning Loyalty Through Value
The club’s low prices and quality goods have cultivated a near‑cult following. Perks such as the US$1.50 hot dog and soda combo or the US$5 rotisserie chicken often cost the company money, yet they draw in shoppers who fill their carts with other items. Costco’s private‑label Kirkland Signature line also delivers savings of 15–20 % compared with national brands. Employees earn comparatively high wages and enjoy generous benefits, fostering a customer‑friendly culture. The result is a virtuous cycle: low prices attract members, high renewal rates give Costco scale, and scale enables even lower prices.

Adjusting the Membership Formula
As inflation and supply-chain challenges have pushed costs higher, Costco has nudged up its dues for the first time in years. Since September 2024 the basic fee has risen by about US$5 and the executive tier by US$10. Even so, members continue to renew at elevated rates. Management views the current dip in global renewal rates – down to around 89.8 % because of a surge in younger, digitally acquired members – as temporary. Fee income rose 14 % year on year in the fourth quarter of 2024 to US$1.72 billion, underscoring the resilience of the subscription model.

Costco has also tightened enforcement of its club rules. To prevent freeloading, store entrances now require members to scan their cards or smartphone QR codes. The company even stopped selling the famous food‑court hot dog combo to non‑members. In September 2025 a new, controversial policy granted executive members exclusive early shopping hours on weekdays and weekends. Although fewer than half of cardholders belong to this tier, they accounted for more than 74 % of net sales in the fourth quarter. The perk has added roughly 1 % to weekly U.S. sales and encouraged some members to upgrade.

Expansion and E‑Commerce
The warehouse chain isn’t standing still. Costco operated 914 warehouses worldwide at the end of August 2025 and plans to grow to around 944 by the end of fiscal 2026. Digital sales rose more than 13 % year on year, with online apparel and electronics leading the way. Though e‑commerce margins are slimmer and tariffs remain a concern, management believes its membership base and private‑label strategy provide a buffer against volatility. The Kirkland brand, which now generates more revenue than some famous apparel labels, continues to strengthen loyalty.

Risks and Outlook
Relying on recurring fees does carry risks. A prolonged economic slowdown could dampen renewals and spending, and younger customers acquired through promotions or online sign‑ups may prove less loyal. Expansion comes with costs that squeezed operating margins to around 2.9 % in mid‑2025. Nevertheless, the company’s net income climbed to US$8.1 billion in fiscal 2025. Executives argue that as long as Costco maintains its value proposition and treats employees well, members will keep paying for the privilege to shop. In the words of the company’s leader, culture is a business strategy, and the warehouse club will continue to prioritise the membership card over the shopping cart.