Changing the Price of Multiple Products at Once
2 min read
When changing the base price of multiple products, it affects the pricing of product options and subscriptions as well.
If any of the products you're changing includes different variants, or a subscription customers can purchase, read below to learn how these prices are automatically adjusted.
Product variants sold at same price
If all of a product's variants are priced the same, then there is nothing special you need to know. For example, if all of the variants were priced at $10 and you increased the price by $2, they will all be priced at $12.
Product variants sold at different prices
You may have products with variants sold at different prices. For example, you might have a $10 product that has a plus $4 charge added to the large size. When you change the base price of a product, the other prices change accordingly.
In other words, if you raise the $10 base price to $15, the large size will be priced at $19, since it has a plus $4 price difference (15 + 4 = 19)
If a product option has a price reduction, the same principle applies. After you change the base price, the negative price difference is automatically applied to the price.
Note:
You cannot sell products whose prices are less than $0. Make sure the price difference together with a variant's price reduction don't dip under $0.
Products sold as a subscription
Product subscriptions are often already sold at a discount, compared to the product's base price. When changing the base price of a product, the subscription price changes accordingly.
For instance, you might have a $50 product, but when purchased as a monthly subscription, it's sold at for $40 a month, or in other words, at a $10 discount.
In this example, if you reduce the base price by $5, then the monthly subscription price would be $35 per month ($45 base price - $10 subscription discount = $35).
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