Ibotta's 2026 State of Spend Report documents a structural change in consumer purchasing: 62% of shoppers now prioritize price over brand loyalty, according to data released by the cash-back platform in January 2025. The finding, drawn from transaction behavior across Ibotta's user base, marks a threshold where price sensitivity overtakes brand preference as the dominant decision variable for the majority of grocery and CPG purchases.
The mechanism is straightforward: when a shopper values price over brand, trial no longer converts to repeat on the strength of product experience alone. The next purchase becomes a new negotiation. Shelf presence, prior satisfaction, and brand recognition still matter, but they lose to a competitor's promotion or a retailer's private label if the spread is wide enough. For CPG brands, this means the traditional funnel — trial via sampling or introductory discount, then organic repeat — no longer holds. Every transaction must now carry visible, immediate value to the buyer.
Why it worked for brands that adapted early: companies that rebuilt acquisition around persistent incentive layers — loyalty programs, app-based rebates, subscription discounts, bundled value — retained share even as price became the primary filter. Ibotta itself operates in this space, offering cash back on branded purchases, effectively lowering the net price without requiring the brand to cut shelf price or margin. Brands that integrate into these platforms or build parallel mechanics keep the customer in a closed loop where their product remains the best-value option, even if it is not the lowest sticker price.
The underlying pattern is conditional loyalty. The shopper is loyal to the brand as long as the brand remains the best deal in category. That conditionality is manageable if the brand controls the incentive layer. A rebate, a points multiplier, a members-only SKU, or a subscribe-and-save discount all create a price advantage that does not require a front-of-store markdown. The brand retains margin, the shopper perceives value, and the transaction repeats.
The steal for a small physical-product brand: you cannot afford Ibotta's platform fees or a full loyalty program, but you can build the same incentive layer with owned tools. Start with a simple rebate mechanic on your website: purchase any SKU, submit proof of purchase via photo upload, receive $3 back via PayPal or Venmo within 48 hours. Promote the rebate in-pack, on your product detail page, and in any email or SMS flow. Cost: your time to process submissions, plus the rebate dollar. For a $20 product, a $3 rebate is a 15% incentive that does not show as a price cut on Amazon or in retail.
Next, layer a subscribe-and-save option if you sell direct. Offer 10-15% off every recurring order, shipped on a 30- or 60-day cycle. The shopper locks in a better price, you lock in repeat revenue, and the competitor has to overcome both inertia and a price gap. If you wholesale through a retailer, work with the buyer to feature your SKU in a digital coupon or store-app promotion. Many regional chains now offer brand-funded digital rebates that clip at checkout. You fund the discount, the retailer administers it, and the shopper sees your product as the best deal in aisle.
Finally, use your packaging to communicate value explicitly. Print the rebate offer on the box. Add a QR code that takes the buyer directly to the claim page. If you offer a subscription, print the recurring-order discount next to the barcode. Shoppers scanning for price now also scan for downstream value. Make it visible before they choose.
The broader pattern: as price overtakes brand, the winning move is not to compete on shelf price but to own the incentive that makes your product the net-best-value choice. Loyalty is not dead; it is conditional, and the condition is math.
The takeaway
When price beats brand for 62% of buyers, build an owned rebate or subscription layer that delivers net-best-value without cutting shelf margin.
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