- Costco still won't raise its membership fee, saying it's still a matter of when, not if.
- The wholesale club last raised fees in 2017, and about every five years before that.
- Membership fees represent more than half the company's operating income.
Costco is once again kicking the can on raising its membership fee.
"I would really kind of revert back to some of the comments that Richard shared previously," CFO Gary Millerchip told investors Thursday, referring to his predecessor, Richard Galanti, who said last year that a Costco membership fee increase would "happen at some point."
"There's nothing about anything that we see within how the business is performing that's changing our view on that," Millerchip said.
The wholesale club last raised fees in 2017, and analysts have noted that an increase is long overdue, based on the typical five- to six-year interval of prior hikes.
Because Costco sells merchandise at extremely low mark-ups, membership fees are a key way the company is able to turn a profit.
Costco reported nearly $1.1 billion in revenue from membership fees last quarter, representing more than half its operating income.
Costco now boasts nearly 134 million member cardholders, up 7.4% from a year ago, and said more than 90% of members renew each year.
The company has resisted a fee increase in favor of alternatives like encouraging entry-level members to upgrade and last year's Netflix-style crackdown on shoppers improperly sharing membership cards.
"It's something that is still a case of when we increase the fee, rather than if we increase the fee, but we're still evaluating those considerations to determine what the right timing is," Millerchip said.
In addition, a fee increase would put Costco's $60 basic Gold Star membership even more ahead of competitors BJ's Wholesale and Sam's Club, who charge $55 and $50, respectively.