Target Ends Price-Match: What It Means for Your Wallet in 2025

The outside of a Target shopping location on a sunny day with blue skies.
jimkruger / iStock.com

Commitment to Our Readers

GOBankingRates' editorial team is committed to bringing you unbiased reviews and information. We use data-driven methodologies to evaluate financial products and services - our reviews and ratings are not influenced by advertisers. You can read more about our editorial guidelines and our products and services review methodology.

20 Years
Helping You Live Richer

Reviewed
by Experts

Trusted by
Millions of Readers

After 12 years of holding strong to a price-matching guarantee, retail giant Target has discontinued its policy of matching the prices of such competitors as Amazon and Walmart, according to Forbes. As of July 28, Target abandoned its 2013 value promise of a 14-day price-match window, in which shoppers could pay at Target the lower advertised prices from other retailers.

“We’ve found our guests overwhelmingly price match Target and not other retailers,” was the official reason given from Target in an unusual statement given to USA Today. By indicating that price matching wasn’t widely used — rather than too expensive for the company to continue — the discontinuing of the policy seems strangely unnecessary.

Additionally, the statement appears to indicate that Target shoppers are matching prices with Target itself (such as expecting in-store prices to match online prices), which one would expect of any retailer.

Why Now?

The change comes at a difficult time in Target’s history. The retailer’s profits were down 1% in 2024 from 2023 (a difference of nearly $1 billion); 2025 has not been much better. First-quarter profits dropped by 2.8% for Target following a boycott related to the retailer’s announcement it would scale back diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) employment policies.

Forbes further noted that Target’s monthly foot traffic has increasingly dropped from February through June, with shoppers turning away from the famously red-hued retailer.

Today's Top Offers

While it remains to be seen how canceling its price matching policy will impact Target, the decision will certainly impact Target shoppers — quite simply, they’ll be paying on average 5% to 13% more on average than they were before.

Savvy shoppers will tell you that Target prices run approximately 13% more expensive than Amazon, and 8% more than Walmart. This means that Target-goers who normally take advantage of price matching will now be stuck with Target’s higher price-points, something that may cause even more bleeding for the ailing company than it has already suffered in 2025.

BEFORE YOU GO

See Today's Best
Banking Offers

Looks like you're using an adblocker

Please disable your adblocker to enjoy the optimal web experience and access the quality content you appreciate from GOBankingRates.

  • AdBlock / uBlock / Brave
    1. Click the ad blocker extension icon to the right of the address bar
    2. Disable on this site
    3. Refresh the page
  • Firefox / Edge / DuckDuckGo
    1. Click on the icon to the left of the address bar
    2. Disable Tracking Protection
    3. Refresh the page
  • Ghostery
    1. Click the blue ghost icon to the right of the address bar
    2. Disable Ad-Blocking, Anti-Tracking, and Never-Consent
    3. Refresh the page