A gym member buys a cancel-anytime monthly plan. Why might it keep charging after motivation fades?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Canceling gets postponed
Canceling gets postponed ✓ — Right. A cancel-anytime option only helps if people actually use it. Subscription research repeatedly finds that inattention, limited self-control, and small cancellation chores can keep payments alive after the original intention has faded.
Flexibility prevents inertia — Not quite. Flexibility gives you an exit, but it does not force you through that exit. That is the subtle trap: a plan can be objectively easier to cancel and still keep billing if the customer postpones the small cancellation chore.
Small fees feel harmless — Not quite. Small recurring fees can feel easier to ignore, but the charge still needs a path to continue. The mechanism here is postponed cancellation: the buyer means to act later, and later keeps arriving.
More Economics questions
- Why might a self-aware gym buyer choose monthly even knowing pay-per-visit could be cheaper?
- 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?
- 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?
