Why might a self-aware gym buyer choose monthly even knowing pay-per-visit could be cheaper?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: It acts as a commitment
It acts as a commitment ✓ — Right. A flat monthly fee can be a self-control tool: paying in advance makes skipping feel like wasting something already bought. That does not mean it will be cheapest; it means the buyer may rationally pay for pressure on a future, lazier self.
It adds social pressure — Not quite. Social pressure can help when friends, classes, or trainers are involved, but a plain monthly fee can work without anyone watching. The mechanism here is self-imposed financial pressure on future behavior.
It signals fitness identity — Not quite. A membership can signal a fitness identity, and that may feel good at signup. But the economic reason to choose monthly despite possible overpayment is pressure on future behavior, not merely owning a fitness label.
More Economics questions
- Why does a prepaid annual gym fee push visits hardest right after payment, not ten months later?
- Which gym payment setup protects a light user when motivation vanishes for weeks?
- A gym member buys a cancel-anytime monthly plan. Why might it keep charging after motivation fades?
- Why can a flat-rate gym plan feel painless after signup, even when each actual visit is costly?
- A gym offers monthly access or pay-per-visit. Why do many light users choose monthly?
