The news: Walmart-owned Sam’s Club is raising prices on select products in response to cost pressures from the Trump administration’s tariffs, The Wall Street Journal reports. The warehouse club is evaluating which goods will see increases, with discretionary items—such as air fryers, coffee makers, and holiday decorations—among the first to be affected.
The retailer does not expect to raise prices on food, thanks to cost-saving efforts like improved packaging that extends shelf life and a broader push to reduce packaging waste.
Why it matters: While many retailers—including Walmart—have already announced plans to pass on higher costs to consumers, Sam’s Club stands out for its reluctance to do so.
- Low prices are central to its value proposition and a main reason members pay the club’s annual membership fee, which accounts for 80% to 90% of the company’s profit.
- Any shift in pricing, even if limited to nonessential items, could test the loyalty of cost-conscious shoppers at a time when value is top of mind.
Our take: Sam’s Club is on a roll. The retailer is generating record-high membership levels and plans to accelerate growth by opening about 15 new stores each year while remodeling existing locations.
But how Sam’s Club handles tariff-driven price increases could determine whether its momentum continues—or stalls. The retailer faces a delicate balancing act in deciding when to absorb rising costs and when to pass them on. The stakes are high. A misstep could either erode profit margins or drive a decline in membership renewals—both of which are essential to its business model.