Endowment Effect

Your constantly-updated definition of Endowment Effect and collection of videos and articles. Be a conversation starter: Share this page and inspire others!
367 shares

What is Endowment Effect?

The endowment effect refers to the way in which humans tend to prefer objects they already possess over those they do not. We place a higher value on an object we are asked to give up, than on a similar object we are asked to obtain. Designers apply this effect to product and web design to influence user behavior.

The term emerged in behavioral economics, where the empirical research of psychologists Richard Thaler, Daniel Kahnerman, and Jack Knetsch has shown considerable differences between buying and selling prices of consumption goods, even when strategic considerations (for making a profit) are excluded. The effect is generally interpreted as a manifestation of the “loss-aversion” principle, which states that humans weigh losses more heavily than they do gains.

When designing a user experience, designers can apply the endowment effect as something that will enhance the prospects of customer retention. For example, having accepted an offer for an initial free trial period for a digital product, users might consider the product as something they “own.” Consequently, they might be more willing to pay a fair price for continuing to “own” it. This is opposed to the users approaching that item without having had the chance to sample it (in which case, lacking the warmth of an owner’s perspective, they would be far less prepared to pay that price for it). Naturally, the product has to prove itself valuable to users; otherwise, they will not continue to use it. This effect can likewise account for why convincing customers to “switch” from a product they already find satisfactory to another is difficult—clearly, the new product will have to offer considerably more, and at a lesser price, to convince a user to adopt it.

Earn a Gift, Answer a Short Quiz!

  1. Question 1
  2. Question 2
  3. Question 3
  4. Get Your Gift

Question 1

What does the endowment effect describe?

1 point towards your gift

Question 2

How can designers apply the endowment effect to increase user retention?

1 point towards your gift

Question 3

Which psychological principle is most closely associated with the endowment effect?

1 point towards your gift

Try Again! IxDF Cheers For You!

0 out of 3 questions answered correctly

Remember, the more you learn about design, the more you make yourself valuable.

Improve your UX / UI Design skills and grow your career! Join IxDF now!

  1. Question 1
  2. Question 2
  3. Question 3
  4. Get Your Gift

Congratulations! You Did Amazing

3 out of 3 questions answered correctly

You earned your gift with a perfect score! Let us send it to you.

Letter from IxDF

Check Your Inbox

We've emailed your gift to name@email.com.

Improve your UX / UI Design skills and grow your career! Join IxDF now!

Literature on Endowment Effect

Here's the entire UX literature on Endowment Effect by the Interaction Design Foundation, collated in one place:

Learn more about Endowment Effect

Take a deep dive into Endowment Effect with our course Get Your Product Used: Adoption and Appropriation .

  • Make yourself invaluable with powerful design skills that directly increase adoption, drive business growth, and fast-track your career. Learn how to strategically engage early adopters and achieve critical mass for successful product launches. This course gives you timeless, human-centered skills because understanding people, guiding behavior, and creating lasting value is essential across roles and industries. Make a meaningful impact in your career and in your company as you open up new markets and expand your influence in your current ones. These skills future-proof your career because understanding human behavior and social dynamics always surpass what AI can achieve. 

  • Gain confidence and credibility with bite-sized lessons and practical exercises you can immediately apply at work. Master the Path of Use to understand what drives usage and captivates people. You'll use the economics of design, network effects, and social systems to drive product adoption in any industry. Analyze real-world product launch successes and failures, and learn from others' mistakes so you can avoid costly trial and error. This course will give you the hands-on design skills you need to launch products with greater confidence and success.

It's Easy to Fast-Track Your Career with the World's Best Experts

Master complex skills effortlessly with proven best practices and toolkits directly from the world's top design experts. Meet your expert for this course:

  • Alan Dix: Author of the bestselling book “Human-Computer Interaction” and Director of the Computational Foundry at Swansea University.

All open-source articles on Endowment Effect

Please check the value and try again.

Open Access—Link to us!

We believe in Open Access and the democratization of knowledge. Unfortunately, world-class educational materials such as this page are normally hidden behind paywalls or in expensive textbooks.

If you want this to change, , link to us, or join us to help us democratize design knowledge!

Share Knowledge, Get Respect!

Share on:

or copy link

Cite according to academic standards

Simply copy and paste the text below into your bibliographic reference list, onto your blog, or anywhere else. You can also just hyperlink to this page.

Interaction Design Foundation - IxDF. (2016, May 25). What is Endowment Effect?. Interaction Design Foundation - IxDF.