Marketing expert weighs in on Costco membership changes
Costco customers will notice a change when they enter the members-only retail store.
Costco cards must now be scanned at the door, at the Waterloo Region and Guelph locations, making it harder for non-members to shop the aisles.
Another change is that membership fees have gone up by as much as $10 a year, depending on which type you have.
The fee hike comes as Costco, like many media streaming companies, has been taking more measures to ensure non-subscribers aren’t taking advantage of other customer memberships.
On Monday, shoppers at the Kitchener location told CTV News it wasn’t much of an inconvenience.
“It was no different than usual honestly, it was just a little bit of a delay because people weren’t used to it,” one man said.
“They check it anyways, so now you just scan it and you get in. It’s fine,” another added.
Costco makes most of their profits off of membership fees, not from the sale of in-store products. Last year, the company earned $4.6 billion USD in revenue from membership fees. That’s an eight per cent increase from 2022.
Costco members show their membership at a Kitchener, Ont. store on Sept. 16, 2024. (Submitted)
Chatura Ranaweera, a marketing professor at Wilfrid Laurier University, says the price of groceries and other products could increase if the company doesn’t crack down on membership moochers.
He approves of the changes.
“Members themselves will benefit because they are the ones who are paying the membership fee and they don't want non fee-paying people to come in and patronize the service,” Ranaweera said, adding that the new scanners “protects the members.”
Costco’s also requires all guests to be accompanied by a valid cardholder to enter its stores, making it more difficult for non-members to sneak in using cards that don’t belong to them.
At the Kitchener location, members hope it doesn’t cause too much of a delay on weekends when the stores are already packed with customers.
Some admit trips to Costco are already time consuming, especially if they don’t stick to their shopping list.
“We just shop around for only those things, not scan the whole Costco cause if we scan the whole Costco, we buy the things we don’t need and just put it in the garage or somewhere,” said one shopper.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Mexico president says Canada has a 'very serious' fentanyl problem
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is not escalating a war of words with Mexico, after the Mexican president criticized Canada's culture and its framing of border issues.
Freeland says it was 'right choice' for her not to attend Mar-a-Lago dinner with Trump
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says it was 'the right choice' for her not to attend the surprise dinner with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at Mar-a-Lago with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump on Friday night.
Quebec doctors who refuse to stay in public system for 5 years face $200K fine per day
Quebec's health minister has tabled a bill that would force new doctors trained in the province to spend the first five years of their careers working in Quebec's public health network.
NDP won't support Conservative non-confidence motion that quotes Singh
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he won't play Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's games by voting to bring down the government on an upcoming non-confidence motion.
Speaker's ruling clears path for Trudeau's government to face successive tests of confidence in days ahead
After rallying his party's caucus and staffers on Parliament Hill Tuesday, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh signalled that he's still not ready to help the other opposition parties trigger an early election, yet.
Opposition leaders talk unity following Trudeau meeting about Trump, minister calls 51st state comment 'teasing'
The prime minister’s emergency meeting with opposition leaders on Tuesday appears to have bolstered a more united front against U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s tariff threats.
Calgary man who drove U-Haul over wife sentenced to 15 years
A Calgary man who killed his wife in 2020 when he drove over her in a loaded U-Haul has been sentenced to 15 years behind bars.
Man severely injured saving his wife from a polar bear attack in the Far North
A man was severely injured Tuesday morning when he leaped onto a polar bear to protect his wife from being mauled in the Far North community of Fort Severn.
Canada is pausing private refugee sponsorship applications until 2026
Immigration Minister Marc Miller says that the recent pause in most private refugee sponsorships is because there is an 'oversupply' of applications and they don't want to give people fleeing war zones false hope.