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HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF THE PINK TAX



Have you ever heard of the pink tax? No, I’m not specifically talking about the color pink or your actual taxes, but an extra cost that’s often added to products and services marketed toward women. It’s basically gender-based pricing, where items marketed toward women are more expensive than the same or very similar items marketed toward men. This directly impacts women’s buying power, with studies showing personal care products can be roughly 13% more expensive than men’s, creating a substantial financial burden over time.


A lot of these products are things society says women have to have, and many of them we realistically can’t go without. For instance, personal care items that we use regularly and most times, even monthly, are affected by the pink tax. Things like razors, deodorant, lotion, clothing, and even services often have a male counterpart that is cheaper, even though the product is basically the same.


Even when you look at actual products, you can see the difference. At Target, a men’s Degree Cool Rush deodorant is priced lower than a women’s Degree MotionSense deodorant, even though they serve the same purpose. 


This pricing difference even starts with kids. A Spider-Man bike helmet marketed toward boys can be significantly cheaper than a nearly identical Spider-Man “Ghost-Spider” helmet marketed toward girls, just because it’s pink and branded differently. It shows how early this kind of pricing starts, even when the product itself is basically the same.

While it’s called a “tax,” it’s not actually a government tax. It’s more of a price markup, mostly caused by marketing

tactics. Companies often claim the higher prices are due to production differences, like adding colors or scents, but realistically, those small changes don’t justify the consistent price gap. We don’t need pink versions of products; we need products that are safe, effective, and affordable.

There’s also something called the tampon tax, which refers to the sales tax placed on essential menstrual products. These are necessary items, not luxury goods, yet they are still taxed in many places. Some states are starting to remove this tax, but it’s still an issue.


The pink tax can be fought in small ways, like buying the “men’s” version of products when they’re cheaper, but that doesn’t fix the bigger problem. This is really a form of price discrimination, and it’s something women deal with every day, whether they realize it or not.


The impact adds up. Women can end up paying up to $2,000 more per year for similar products. Over a lifetime, that’s a huge amount of money just because of gender-based marketing. On top of existing wage gaps and inequality in the workforce, this becomes just one more financial burden.


So is this really the cost of being a woman? It might sound like a theory, but there’s strong evidence that it’s happening. The pink tax shows how inequality can exist in everyday things, even in something as simple as buying deodorant or a bike helmet.


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