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I Own A Laundromat! When Should I Raise My Prices?

Written by jd

Oct 17, 2025

So, when is it ok to raise my prices?  Well, below is an outline to consider.

1. Rising Input Costs & Inflation as Triggers

  • A common driver for price increases is persistent increases in utilities, rent, labor, maintenance, supplies. Many laundromat-owners explicitly cite “keeping up with cost of doing business” as their rationale. American Coin-Op+2laundroboostmarketing.com+2

  • In the laundry business, utility costs are especially volatile. If your utility costs as a share of gross revenue begin creeping above industry benchmarks (e.g. 15–20 %) you should consider a price adjustment. laundroboostmarketing.com

  • In highly inflationary environments, research suggests companies shift from occasional price updates to a more dynamic or “inflation-plus” approach: raise not just by inflation, but a margin above it. McKinsey & Company+2McKinsey & Company+2

2. Regular Price Review Cadence

  • Many laundromat pricing guides recommend reviewing prices quarterly or semiannually in response to cost changes, competitor movements, and demand signals. Cents

  • However, changes are usually executed less frequently (e.g. annually) to avoid confusing or alienating customers. The Laundry Boss+2Laundromat Millionaire+2

  • According to the 2022 Coin Laundry Association survey: 65 % of laundromat owners planned price increases in the coming 12 months (up from only 34 % prior). This suggests an industry norm: yearly upward adjustments. planetlaundry.com

3. Demand & Capacity Signals

  • When demand is high and machines are near capacity (frequent queues, high utilization), raising prices is more tolerable because customers have less elasticity. The Laundry Boss+2laundroboostmarketing.com+2

  • Time-of-day or peak-hour pricing (e.g. a modest surcharge during evenings/weekends) is cited in laundromat strategy guides as a lever. BusinessDojo+1

  • Conversely, low utilization or falling traffic is a red flag: price increases will risk losing volume.

4. Competitive Benchmarking & Market Position

  • One strong recommendation: before raising, survey all local competitors’ wash & dry cycle prices (including special/discount pricing) to understand your relative positioning. HK Laundry+1

  • If your facility’s service level, cleanliness, amenities, convenience, or payment options exceed those of others, you have license to raise prices—customers may perceive added value. The Laundry Boss+2Laundromat Millionaire+2

  • Be cautious if you’re already priced at the high end locally; large increases may push you out of tolerance.

5. Customer Communication & Psychology

  • Research indicates that how you communicate a price raise matters as much as when you do it. Be transparent about cost pressures (e.g. “utilities up 15 %”, “new machines, maintenance”) to reduce backlash. American Laundry News+2Laundromat Millionaire+2

  • Gradual, modest increases (5–10 %) are preferred over sudden, large hikes—they reduce “sticker shock.” Cents+2Laundromat Millionaire+2

  • To soften the impact, some operators grandfather existing loyal customers for a period, or offer loyalty incentives or discount credits. American Laundry News

6. Menu Costs & Price Rigidity

  • Economic theory around menu costs (the fixed cost of changing price signage, communication, etc.) suggests that businesses often wait until a threshold is crossed (costs rising enough) before making a discrete adjustment rather than continuously tweaking prices. Wikipedia

  • This “lumpy adjustment” behavior is seen in many service businesses.


Synthesis: When You (as a Laundromat Owner) Should Raise Prices

Putting theory and industry practice together with what your internal analysis suggests, here’s a refined guideline:

  1. Maintain a regular review cadence — at minimum every 6–12 months, review input costs (utilities, lease, taxes, labor) and competitor prices.

  2. Trigger a price increase when…

    • Your utility, supply, or labor costs have risen significantly (say +8–15 %) since the last adjustment.

    • Your machines are consistently busy (e.g. demand > 80 % of capacity), with wait times or frequent queuing.

    • Your competitors have already raised prices, or your current pricing is below market norms (after accounting for your services/amenities).

    • You have made capital improvements (new machines, facility upgrades) which justify passing on value.

  3. Execute modest, incremental raises — 5–10 % is typical. This aligns well with industry practice to avoid shocking customers. Cents+2planetlaundry.com+2

  4. Communicate clearly and honestly — let customers know why prices are changing (costs rising, reinvestment, quality) and offer grace (e.g. grandfathering, loyalty discounts) where feasible. American Laundry News+1

  5. Test in phases if needed — try incremental increases on select machines or peak hours first, then roll out broadly if acceptance is good.

  6. Avoid doing nothing — letting costs rise without adjusting pricing erodes margins, leads to deferred maintenance, and reduces your ability to invest in your facility. laundryadvisors.com

For your reference, here’s a quick, Tennessee/Southeast pricing benchmark (from real stores) and a clear rule-set for when to raise prices. I pulled recent, public price sheets where available and focused on Nashville/Knoxville (plus a regional view).

Southeast Benchmarks (2025)

Nashville (city example)

  • Gallatin Pike Coin Laundry – self-serve: 20 lb $4.50; 40 lb $7.50; 60 lb $9.50; 80 lb $11.50. Dryers: 30 lb (30 min) $2.25; 45 lb (32 min) $2.75; 75 lb (35 min) $3.50. gallatinpikecoinlaundry.com

  • Nashville market WDF (regional comparison): typical $0.99–$3.00 per lb across providers. Tide Cleaners

Knoxville (multiple hard price pages)

  • WaveMax – self-serve: 20 lb starts $3.25; 80 lb $9.00. Dryers: $0.25/6 min (30-lb) and $0.25/4 min (45-lb). WDF: in-store $1.75/lb; same-day $2.00/lb (min $15). wavemaxknoxville.com

  • Tropic Breeze – self-serve: 22 lb $3.50; 40 lb $6.00; 60 lb $7.50. Dryers: 30-lb first 5 min $0.50 then $0.25/3 min; 75-lb first 5 min $1.00 then $0.50/3 min. WDF: next-day $1.75/lb, same-day $1.95/lb (10-lb min). tropicbreezelaundry.com

Regional ranges (for context)

  • Other Southeastern operators list similar self-serve and WDF ladders (examples: 360 Wash-N-Dry’s menu; Xpress Laundry Solutions’ WDF tiers). 360wash-n-dry.com+1

What this implies (TN/Southeast 2025 “street” range):


When to Raise Prices (what broader research says)

1) Tie raises to costs & a review cadence

  • Quarterly reviews; annual (or 12–18 mo) increases are common best practice—track utilities, rent, labor, and competitors, then adjust in 5–10% steps. Cents

  • Industry polling shows price hikes are the frequent response to higher utilities (notably natural gas/electric). American Coin-Op

2) Demand/capacity triggers

  • If machines are near capacity (queues, >~80% utilization at peaks), the market tolerates a modest lift; off-peak discounting/time-of-day pricing can also smooth demand. Cents

3) Competitive benchmarking

  • Survey nearby stores’ price ladders by machine size, dryer tariffs, and WDF; operators with cleaner stores, better amenities, and cashless/loyalty often price at the top of local ranges. Cents

4) Communication matters

  • Explain the “why”—utilities, reinvestment, or service upgrades—and use small, periodic increments vs. rare, large hikes to minimize churn. American Laundry News

5) Practical timing nuances

  • Some owners time increases before the busy fall/winter season (after back-to-school) to absorb traffic with minimal volume loss. American Coin-Op


Actionable Playbook for You (TN operator)

  1. Set your guardrails now

    • If utility or labor costs are up ≥8–12% since your last change or if your average washer utilization regularly exceeds ~80% at peaks, that’s a green light to adjust. American Coin-Op+1

  2. Targeted size-by-size changes

    • Move the most constrained sizes first (usually 40–80 lb washers) by $0.25–$0.75 depending on gap vs. the local range above; bump smalls by $0.25–$0.50 if you’re below mid-market. Dryers: nudge to next common step (e.g., from $0.25/6 min to $0.25/5 min, or add $0.25 opener on large pockets). wavemaxknoxville.com+2tropicbreezelaundry.com+2

  3. WDF tuning

    • If you’re ≤$1.75/lb with solid demand or premium soaps/packaging, move toward $1.95–$2.15/lb (same-day a bit higher), which aligns with Knoxville/Nashville peers while staying under premium chains’ ceiling. wavemaxknoxville.com+2tropicbreezelaundry.com+2

  4. Cadence & messaging

    • Review quarterly; implement 1–2x/year in 5–10% increments; post clear signage (“utilities up X%”; “new equipment/amenities”), and pair with a loyalty perk (e.g., 2x points for 30 days). Cents+1

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