Costco members may be overlooking this valuable feature

Memberships drive Costco’s business. โ€œThe most important item we sell is the membership card,โ€ Costco CEO Ron Vachris told Fortune. Costco also makes much of its profit from selling memberships, since it sells most of its merchandise at very low margins. Members โ€œkeep coming back because they know Costco will pass savings on to them,โ€…


Costco members may be overlooking this valuable feature

Memberships drive Costco’s business.

โ€œThe most important item we sell is the membership card,โ€ Costco CEO Ron Vachris told Fortune.

Costco also makes much of its profit from selling memberships, since it sells most of its merchandise at very low margins.

Members โ€œkeep coming back because they know Costco will pass savings on to them,โ€ creating a model where membership income helps fund low prices and those low prices drive renewals, according to The Motley Fool.

“Shoppers pay an annual fee to join, and in fiscal 2025 (year ended Aug. 31, 2025), these fees generated $5.3 billion in revenue. And since the costs of running this membership are minimal, nearly all of that goes straight to the bottom line,” The Motley Fool’s Lawrence Nga wrote.

The warehouse club has seen its membership revenue rise, partially because of its Sept. 1 membership fee hike, and partly by adding new members.

Its renewal rate, however, fell, and that’s tied to a feature many members don’t know about โ€” “set it and forget it” auto-renewal.

“We reported membership fee income of $1.355 billion, an increase of $162 million or 13.6% year-over-year,” CFO Gary Millerchip said during the warehouse club’s second-quarter earnings call. “The September 2024 U.S. and Canada membership fee increase accounted for about one-third of our membership income growth.”

Numbers would have been strong even without the increase from $60 to $65 for Gold memberships and $120 to $130 for Executive memberships.

“Excluding the membership fee increase and FX, membership income grew 7.5% year-over-year. This was driven by continued growth in our membership base and upgrades to executive memberships,” he added.

  • At Q2 end, Costco had 40.4 million paid executive memberships, up 9.5% versus last year.

  • The chain ended the quarter with 82.1 million total paid members, up 4.8% versus last year, and 147.2 million cardholders, up 4.7% year over year.

  • In terms of renewal rates, at Q2 end, Costco’s U.S. and Canada renewal rate was 92.1%, down 0.1% from last quarter, and the worldwide rate came in at 89.7%, unchanged from last quarter.

“The slight decline in the U.S. and Canada renewal rate was due to the factors we have discussed in prior quarters and reflects new online members growing as a percentage of our total base and renewing at a slightly lower rate than warehouse sign-ups,” he shared.

That’s partially an auto-renewal problem because the chain’s growing number of members who join online don’t opt into auto-renewal at the same rate as members who sign up in a warehouse. This has explained the chain’s slightly lower renewal rates.

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