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Every time I think Costco has hit peak brilliance, they pull a move so simple — so obvious — that it makes the rest of the retail world look like they’re running their businesses from a damp basement with dial-up internet.
This latest story? It’s not about $1.50 hot dogs. It’s not about samples. It’s not about aisles so big you could land a small plane inside.
It’s about a TV. And the way Costco handled that TV proves why customers don’t just shop there — they swear allegiance.
A Costco member buys a 65-inch TV. A big one. A “we’re never leaving the couch again” kind of TV.
A few days later, the price drops by $100. Now, in most stores, this is where the emotional rollercoaster begins:
Stage 1: Rage.
Stage 2: Denial.
Stage 3: Accept that life is pain.
Stage 4: Return to store and argue with someone who definitely doesn’t get paid enough for this.
But this wasn’t most stores.
Costco emailed the guy first. They told him the price dropped. And then they gave him a $100 Costco Shop Card to make up the difference.
He didn’t fill out a form. He didn’t stand in line. He didn’t beg. He didn’t have to talk to a manager who pretends to check the system for seven minutes before saying “Sorry, we can’t do that.”
Costco just… did it.
But the universe wasn’t finished. The price dropped AGAIN, another $50, and Costco sent him another email with another shop card.
At this point the man is probably checking the sky for hidden cameras, expecting Ashton Kutcher to jump out of a pallet of paper towels. And the best part?
He didn’t even know this was an actual Costco policy.
Costco’s website clearly states: If something you bought goes on sale within 30 days, you get the difference back. But here’s where Costco steps into Jedi-level customer experience:
They didn’t wait for him to ask. They acted before he even noticed the issue.
Most companies treat price adjustments like nuclear launch codes: guarded, complicated, and definitely not available to the general public.
Costco? They use it as a chance to create delight instead of annoyance. And the internet noticed. The guy posted about it, and thousands of people piled in with comments like:
“THIS is why Costco is the gold standard.” “Take my money forever.” “I would buy a car from Costco if they sold one.”
That’s loyalty; the emotional, irrational kind companies dream about.
Costco didn’t have to refund that customer. If they said nothing, he wouldn’t have known. He would’ve blamed himself for bad timing and moved on. But now? He’s telling the world. And the world is listening.
Here’s what Costco understands that most companies don’t:
Loyalty isn’t built by making things right when customers complain.
Loyalty is built by making things right before they complain.
This is the difference between a customer and a fan.
Most businesses take the stance: “We’ll help you… but only after you suffer.”
Costco takes the stance: “We’ll help you before you even knew you needed it.”
Here's how any business can steal Costco’s playbook:
Returns, price drops, delays, mistakes — they all create regret. If you can remove regret proactively, customers assume you care. If you make them fight for it, they assume you don’t.
Most businesses weaponize their policies. Costco uses theirs to deliver “Wow” moments. Rewrite your rules so they make you look generous, not paranoid.
If you know the price dropped? If you know something shipped late? Reach out first. The goodwill you generate is worth far more than whatever refund you hand out.
A shop card isn’t huge. But it’s enough to make customers say: “Now THAT’S a company I trust.” Every brand wants word-of-mouth. Most brands don’t do anything worthy of being talked about.
This is the secret Costco weapon. People don’t shop there because of the return policy. They shop there because they feel like the kind of company that would have a great return policy.
That’s the magic.
Costco doesn’t win because they’re cheap. Costco wins because they’re fair.
They don’t nickel-and-dime.
They don’t hide behind nonsense terms.
They don’t treat customers like adversaries.
They run a business like adults who know the customer will remember how you made them feel.
Any business can do this. Most just don’t have the courage, discipline, or common sense.

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