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CPG glossary

Everyday low price (EDLP) vs Hi-Lo pricing

What everyday low price means

Everyday low price (EDLP) is a retail pricing strategy of holding shelf prices steady and low all the time, instead of bouncing between high regular prices and deep temporary discounts. Walmart built its entire brand on it, and Costco runs a version of the same idea: the price you see this week is roughly the price you'll see next week. The opposite approach, Hi-Lo, is what Kroger and most conventional grocery run: a higher base price punctuated by frequent promotions, coupons, and circular features.

If you sell into both kinds of retailer, this isn't an academic distinction. The same SKU gets a completely different financial treatment depending on which model the retailer uses, and your trade spend behaves differently in each.

EDLP vs Hi-Lo on a single SKU

Take one product (a 10 oz jar of pasta sauce the brand sells to the retailer at $2.20 a unit) and run it through both models. Assume the retailer wants the same blended margin over a 4-week month.

LineEDLP (Walmart)Hi-Lo (Kroger)
Retailer cost per unit$2.20$2.20
Shelf price (regular)$2.99$3.49
Promoted price (1 wk/4)none$2.49
Blended shelf price$2.99$3.24
Units/store/week (avg)3026
Blended retailer margin~26.4%~32.1% on base weeks

The EDLP shelf price ($2.99) never moves, so the shopper does no math and the retailer carries thinner per-unit retail margin in exchange for steadier volume. The Hi-Lo retailer prices higher most of the month ($3.49), then drops to $2.49 in the promo week to pull a spike. The blended price lands at $3.24, above the EDLP shelf, but it depends on shoppers paying full freight in the three non-promo weeks. Cherry-pickers who only buy on deal break that math.

Notice the volume line too. The steady EDLP price moves a bit more baseline (30 vs 26 units), but the Hi-Lo promo week can spike well past either when the discount hits. Different shapes, same goal.

What each model does to trade spend

This is the part brand-side analysts have to watch. Under Hi-Lo, your trade dollars fund the promo week directly: the $2.49 price needs a markdown, and the brand usually pays for it through an off-invoice allowance or a scan-based deal. That spend is visible, lumpy, and tied to specific weeks.

Under EDLP, there's often no week-to-week promotion to fund at all. Instead the retailer wants a lower everyday cost, so the "spend" shows up as a permanently reduced list price or an ongoing per-case allowance baked into the deal. It's quieter, but it never stops. A brand that's used to budgeting trade as a series of TPRs can underestimate the EDLP commitment because it doesn't arrive as discrete events.

The base-versus-promoted split tells the story:

Volume typeEDLP shareHi-Lo share
Baseline volume~95%~65%
Promoted volume~5%~35%

In a Hi-Lo account, a third or more of your units can move on deal, which means your reported velocity is partly bought. In an EDLP account, almost everything is baseline, so the velocity number is cleaner but the price ceiling is lower. When you compare a Walmart and a Kroger report side by side, you're comparing two different volume mixes, not just two prices.

Why the distinction matters to an analyst

If you benchmark a SKU's performance across an EDLP and a Hi-Lo retailer without adjusting for the model, you'll draw the wrong conclusion. The Hi-Lo account looks like it has more "lift," but that lift is just the promo weeks; net out the trade spend and the picture often flips. The EDLP account looks flat and unpromoted, but its baseline is doing all the work, which is usually healthier for long-run margin.

The cleanest way to read it: separate baseline from promoted volume in every account, then compare baselines to baselines. That neutralizes the pricing model and shows you which retailer is actually building demand versus which one is renting it one promo week at a time. It also clarifies where your shopper marketing dollars do more good, since EDLP and Hi-Lo shoppers respond to very different signals.

Where Scout fits

The hard part of EDLP-vs-Hi-Lo analysis is splitting baseline from promoted volume consistently across retailers that price in completely different rhythms. Scout connects your SPINS or retailer data and reads each account on its own terms, so a flat EDLP line and a spiky Hi-Lo line become comparable. It measures and analyzes the result; it doesn't set your prices or execute the deals. It just keeps the comparison honest.

The short version

  • Everyday low price (EDLP) means steady low shelf prices all the time (Walmart, Costco), versus Hi-Lo's higher base price plus frequent deep promotions (Kroger, conventional grocery).
  • EDLP leans on baseline volume at thinner per-unit margin; Hi-Lo leans on promo-week spikes funded by visible trade spend, with a much larger promoted-volume share.
  • To compare a SKU across both, split baseline from promoted volume and benchmark baselines, or the Hi-Lo "lift" will fool you.

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