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Larger clothes sometimes cost more online. Is it price discrimination?
Women’s fashion site Need Supply priced this item as $46. But that only applied to size small. The retailer has since changed the price to $54 for all sizes. (screenshot from August 6, 2018)
Women’s fashion site Need Supply priced this item as $46. But that only applied to size small. The retailer has since changed the price to $54 for all sizes. (screenshot from August 6, 2018)

Shopping for clothes online has generally become a positive experience for consumers, as the saturated landscape drives retailers to offer everything from free shipping and returns to competitive pricing.

But sometimes the advertised price does not apply to all sizes. While not a new practice, Yahoo Finance has discovered that more e-commerce players are pricing larger sizes of products at a significantly higher price point.

Need Supply, a Virginia-based women’s clothing site that ships globally, advertised a crop top from its in-house brand Farrow for $46. But once you changed the sizing options, it was evident that the price only applied to a size small. The other two available sizes — medium and large — were listed for an additional $8. The screenshot above was taken on August 6.

Yahoo Finance reached out to Need Supply multiple times for comment. While Need Supply did not respond, two weeks later, when we checked the website on August 20, the site had raised the price of the shirt to $54, with no additional cost attached to the larger sizes.

Need Supply pricing on August 20
Need Supply pricing on August 20

“Typically, dynamic pricing is something you see when purchasing time-dependent items like airline tickets or concert tickets. However, I have yet to see examples of this in fashion. The area where dynamic pricing may be applicable in clothing is in fast fashion where products go in and out quickly,” said Brian Lee, associate director of research at retail consulting firm Gartner L2.

On many sites, the disparity in pricing is not immediately noticeable. Farfetch is a UK-based online platform that sells products from 900 luxury boutiques around the world. Several items on the site had a gaping disparity in pricing between the smaller and larger sizes.

A Calvin Klein x Andy Warhol tank dress is listed as “on sale.” This is true for size small, which is 70% off and goes for $119. However, no other size of the dress is on sale, the size medium goes for $212 and large for $277. The stealthy part of this pricing is that it’s only visible once you toggle to the size of your choice.

Farfetch women’s pricing
Farfetch women’s pricing

The site insists that being a third-party platform absolves it from the boutiques’ pricing structures. “Farfetch is not a retailer. It operates a marketplace platform on which boutiques and brands, which are selected to feature on the marketplace, set prices on their products for both full and sale price. Farfetch does not set the prices,” Giorgio Belloli, chief commercial and sustainability officer at Farfetch, told Yahoo Finance.

When asked about why the larger sizes are priced so much higher, Belloli blamed import duties and currency rates for fluctuating prices. “There can be instances in which different boutiques set different prices across products and sizes.” Ultimately, however, he said it’s not a size-ist practice and that consumers will continue to come to the platform for “a differentiated luxury experience.”