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Home›The Economy›Global & Applied›Applied Economics

Switching Costs: The Friction That Keeps Customers Locked In

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
5 sources4 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Switching costs are the one-time costs — financial, time, psychological — of changing from one supplier to another
  • High switching costs allow incumbents to charge above-competitive prices: customers stay even when rivals offer better deals
  • Switching costs create a two-stage competitive dynamic: firms compete fiercely for new customers (low switching costs), then exploit the locked-in base (high switching costs)
  • Types include: financial (cancellation fees, sunk investments), learning costs (time to master new tools), contractual (minimum terms), compatibility costs (data portability), and relational (lost history and trust)
On this page
  • The setup
  • What happens — and why
  • Where you see it in the wild
  • The fix (or why it's hard to fix)

A small business has used QuickBooks for accounting for eight years. All its financial history, payroll records, tax filings, and invoicing templates are in QuickBooks format. Switching to a competitor might save $600 per year in subscription fees, but it would require exporting and reformatting years of data, retraining staff, and rebuilding custom reports. The migration would cost weeks of staff time and hundreds of dollars in consulting fees — and carry real risk of data loss or accounting errors. The business stays with QuickBooks not because it's the best accounting software on the market but because the switching cost exceeds the competitive price differential. This is customer lock-in — and it is why Intuit can charge above-competitive prices to an installed base that rational analysis would suggest should have switched.

The setup

Switching costs are the direct and indirect costs a buyer incurs when changing from one supplier, product, or service to another. They encompass:

Financial costs: cancellation fees, early termination penalties, lost deposits, sunk investments in proprietary equipment or software licenses.

Learning and transition costs: time and effort required to master a new system, retrain employees, or rebuild institutional knowledge accumulated with the incumbent supplier.

Compatibility and integration costs: cost of migrating data, replacing interconnected systems, or rebuilding workflows designed around the incumbent.

Contractual lock-in: minimum subscription terms, exclusive dealing arrangements, or long-term contracts that contractually restrict switching for a period.

Relational and informational costs: loss of the incumbent's accumulated knowledge of the customer's preferences, credit history, or service patterns — requiring the new supplier to relearn what the incumbent already knows.

What happens — and why

Switching costs create market power through a two-stage competitive dynamic:

Stage 1 (acquisition): firms compete aggressively for new customers who have no incumbent — offering discounts, free trials, and promotional pricing. The competition is fierce because the prize is a long-term locked-in relationship.

Stage 2 (retention): once customers are locked in, firms can raise prices above the competitive level by up to the switching cost — customers will stay if the price premium is smaller than the cost of switching. A customer who would cost $500 to move has effectively given the incumbent $500 of pricing power above the competitive level.

The CFPB's research on consumer financial products documents switching costs in retail banking: most consumers stay with their primary bank for decades despite fee structures and interest rates that are often inferior to available alternatives. Bank account switching costs — changing direct deposit, updating automatic payments, transferring account history — are substantial enough that above-competitive pricing persists even in markets with many competing banks.

Where you see it in the wild

Enterprise software is the clearest switching cost market. The FTC's investigation of cloud computing competition identified switching costs as a primary barrier to competition in cloud services: data stored in proprietary formats, applications built around vendor-specific APIs, and migration complexity create multi-year commitment even when contract terms expire. The tech industry term for this is "vendor lock-in."

Mobile phone number portability — mandated by the FCC — is a regulatory response to relational switching costs: consumers are more likely to switch carriers if they can keep their phone number. The policy reduced one key switching cost and measurably increased competitive churn in the market.

The fix (or why it's hard to fix)

Reducing switching costs through open standards, data portability mandates, and interoperability requirements is the policy toolkit most directly targeted at this market failure. The European Union's Digital Markets Act includes data portability requirements for large platforms — an explicit attempt to reduce switching costs and restore competitive pressure to markets where incumbent lock-in has suppressed it. The right policy balance depends on whether switching costs reflect genuine consumer investment (which should be recoverable) or artificial lock-in through proprietary formats (which can be eliminated through standardization).

◆ Sources

  1. CFPB Consumer Finance Research — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  2. FTC Cloud Computing Competition Study — Federal Trade Commission
  3. DOJ Antitrust Division — Technology Cases
  4. Switching Costs — Investopedia
  5. Industrial Organization — NBER Research Topics
On this page
  • The setup
  • What happens — and why
  • Where you see it in the wild
  • The fix (or why it's hard to fix)
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  • Environmental Economics: Pricing the Planet and the Policy Math Behind Climate Action
  • The Network Effect: Why Some Products Become More Valuable as They Grow
All Applied Economics →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

View full profile →

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