Keystone pricing: still the default in retail, and why

Doubling your wholesale cost is the oldest retail pricing rule in the book. It survives because it's simple, but it doesn't survive every category.

What keystone pricing is

Keystone pricing means setting your retail price at double your wholesale cost. Buy a sweater from your supplier for $30, sell it for $60. That's a 100% markup, which equals a 50% margin.

The term comes from the architectural keystone — the central stone in an arch that holds the whole structure together. The retailer's keystone, doubling the cost, was historically the central pricing principle holding the retail business model together.

Why it's still the default

Three reasons keystone has stuck around for a century:

Where keystone breaks down

It doesn't survive contact with categories where competition has compressed margins to invisibility.

Keystone still works in:

Variations: when not to keystone exactly

Smart retailers move away from strict keystone in two directions:

Below keystone (the discount play): price a known product 10-20% below keystone to drive comparison shopping. Make it up on accessories, related items, or sheer volume. Costco's whole model is this — they cap margins around 14% to keep traffic flowing.

Above keystone (the differentiation play): on products that compete on brand or experience rather than price, mark up 150-300% (60-75% margin). Boutiques and luxury retailers live here. Apparel often runs 2.5x keystone (175% markup).

The MSRP problem

When suppliers print a Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price on the package, they're usually suggesting keystone (or close). Selling below MSRP is often forbidden by MAP (Minimum Advertised Price) agreements. Selling above is allowed but rarely competitive. This is why even retailers who'd prefer a different markup strategy end up close to keystone on branded products — the supplier locked in the rough math.

What to use instead

For modern retail, especially with any online competition, three more sophisticated approaches:

The takeaway

Keystone pricing isn't wrong — it's a useful default in categories where it still fits. But it's a default, not a strategy. Any retailer treating "double the cost" as universal law is leaving money on the table in some categories and pricing themselves out of others.

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