The Times Australia
Google AI
The Times Australia
.

AI is using your data to set personalised prices online. It could seriously backfire

  • Written by Nitika Garg, Professor of Marketing, UNSW Sydney

You check prices online for a flight to Melbourne today. It’s $300. You leave your browser open. Two hours later, it’s $320. Half a day later, $280. Welcome to the world of algorithmic pricing[1], where technology tries to figure out what price you’re willing to pay.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is quietly remaking how companies set prices. Not only do prices shift with demand (dynamic pricing), but firms are increasingly tailoring prices to individual customers (personalised pricing).

This change isn’t just technical – it raises big questions about fairness, transparency and regulation.

How different pricing models work

Dynamic pricing reacts to the market and has been used for years on travel and retail[2] websites.

Algorithms track supply, demand, timing and competitor prices. When demand peaks, prices rise for everyone. When it eases, they fall. Think Uber’s surge fares, airline ticket jumps in school holidays, or hotel rates during major events. This kind of variable pricing is now commonplace.

Personalised pricing[3] goes further. AI uses personal data – your browsing history, purchase habits, device, even postcode – to predict your willingness to pay. The price varies with the individual. Some call this “surveillance pricing[4]”.

Two people looking at the same product at the same time might see different prices. A person who always abandons carts might get a discount, while someone who rarely shops might see a premium price.

A study by the European Parliament defines personalised pricing[5] as “price differentiation for identical products or services at the same time based on information a trader holds about a potential customer”.

Whereas dynamic pricing depends on the market, personalised pricing depends on the individual consumer.

It started with airfares

This shift began with the airline industry. Since deregulation in the 1990s, airlines have used[6] “yield management” to alter fares depending on how many seats are left or how close to the departure date a booking is made.

More recently, airlines combine that with personalisation. They draw on shopping behaviour, social media context, device type, past browsing history – all to craft fare offers uniquely for you[7].

Hotels followed. A hotel might raise its base rate, but send a special “member only” discount to someone who has stayed before, or offer a price drop to someone lingering on a booking page. In hotel revenue management, pricing strategies[8] enable companies to target distinct customer segments with different benefits (such as leisure versus business travellers).

AI enhances this process by enabling automated integration[9] of large amounts of customer data into individual pricing.

Booking.com logo displayed on a phone screen and a map of Krakow
Booking.com recorded a 162% increase in sales when it used modelling to send special offers. Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images[10]

Now the trend is spreading. E-commerce platforms such as Booking.com routinely test[11] personalised discounts, depending on your profile. Ride-share apps[12], grocery promos, digital subscription plans – the reach can be broad.

How AI-driven personalised pricing works

At its core, such systems mine data, a lot of it. Every click, the amount of time spent on a web page, prior purchases, abandoned carts, location, device type, browsing path – these all feed into a profile. Machine learning models predict your “willingness to pay”. Using these predictions, the system picks a price that maximises revenue while hoping not to lose the sale.

Some platforms go further. At Booking.com, teams used modelling[13] to select which users should receive a special offer, while meeting budget constraints. This drove a 162% increase in sales, while limiting the cost of promotions for the platform.

So you might not be seeing a standard price; you might be seeing a price engineered for you.

The risk is consumer backlash

There are, of course, risks to the strategy of personalised pricing.

First, fairness. If two households in the same suburb pay different rent or mortgage rates, that seems arbitrary. Pricing that uses income proxies (such as device type or postcode) might entrench inequality. Algorithms may discriminate (even unintentionally) against certain demographics.

Second, alienation. Consumers often feel cheated when they find a lower price later. Once trust is lost, customers might turn away or seek to game the system (clear cookies, browse in incognito mode, switch devices).

Third, accountability. Currently, transparency is low; firms rarely disclose the use of personalised pricing. If AI sets a price that breaches consumer law by being misleading or discriminatory, who’s liable — the firm or the algorithm designer?

What the regulators say

In Australia, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) is taking notice. A five-year inquiry[14] published in June 2025 flagged algorithmic transparency, unfair trading practices, and consumer harms as central issues.

The commission said:

current laws are insufficient and regulatory reform is urgently needed.

It recommended stronger oversight of digital platforms, economy-wide unfair trading rules, and mechanisms to force algorithmic disclosure.

Is this efficient, or creepy?

We’re entering a world where your price might differ from mine — even in real time. That can unlock efficiency, new forms of loyalty pricing, or targeted discounts. But it can also feel Orwellian, unfair or exploitative.

The challenge for business is to deploy AI pricing ethically and transparently, in ways customers can trust. The challenge for regulators is to catch up. The ACCC’s actions suggest Australia is moving in that direction but many legal, technical, and philosophical questions remain.

References

  1. ^ algorithmic pricing (doi.org)
  2. ^ travel and retail (doi.org)
  3. ^ Personalised pricing (policyreview.info)
  4. ^ surveillance pricing (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ personalised pricing (www.europarl.europa.eu)
  6. ^ airlines have used (www.sciencedirect.com)
  7. ^ uniquely for you (doi.org)
  8. ^ pricing strategies (doi.org)
  9. ^ automated integration (doi.org)
  10. ^ Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images (www.gettyimages.com.au)
  11. ^ routinely test (dl.acm.org)
  12. ^ Ride-share apps (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  13. ^ teams used modelling (dl.acm.org)
  14. ^ five-year inquiry (www.accc.gov.au)

Read more https://theconversation.com/ai-is-using-your-data-to-set-personalised-prices-online-it-could-seriously-backfire-266995

Why Farrer is a key test for One Nation vs the Coalition

The Farrer by-election[1] on May 9 will be a major test for new Liberal leader Angus Taylor and new Nationals ...

Times Magazine

Why Car Enthusiasts Are Turning to Container Shipping for Interstate Moves

Moving across the country requires careful planning and plenty of patience. The scale of domestic ...

What to know if you’re considering an EV

Soaring petrol prices are once again making many Australians think seriously[1] about switching ...

Epson launches ELPCS01 mobile projector cart

Designed for the EB-810E[1] projector and provides easy setup for portable displays in flexible ...

Governance Models for Headless CMS in Large Organizations

Where headless CMS is adopted by large enterprises, governance is the single most crucial factor d...

Narwal Freo Z10 Robotic Vacuum and Mop Cleaner

Narwal Freo Z10 Robotic Vacuum and Mop Cleaner  Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.4/5) Category: Premium Robot ...

Shark launches SteamSpot - the shortcut for everyday floor mess

Shark introduces the Shark SteamSpot Steam Mop, a lightweight steam mop designed to make everyda...

The Times Features

AI Is Already Here. The Question Is Whether Your Business Is Built for It

We sat down with Nirlep Adhikari — CTO at LoanOptions.ai and Founder of Mount Mindforce — to cut...

Cleared to Land — and Cleared to Die: How a Runway Failure Killed Two Pilots in Seconds

A modern passenger jet, operating under full clearance, descending onto a controlled runway at o...

Leader of The Nationals Matt Canavan - press conference

CANBERRA PARLIAMENT HOUSE PRESS CONFERENCE WITH SHADOW WATER MINISTER MICHAEL McCORMACK; MURRAY-DA...

The Power Of An Uncomfortable Love

How challenging relationships can help us grow. Never have we lived in a time where relationshi...

US country favourite Larry Fleet joins 2026 Gympie Music Muster

Tennessee singer-songwriter Larry Fleet will bring his band to the Gympie Music Muster on Friday...

56 OF YOUR FAVORITE DISNEY STARS SHINE BRIGHT IN DISNEY ON ICE PRESENTS MAGIC IN THE STARS!

The most Disney characters in one show and the on-ice debut of Raya from Raya and the Last Dragon...

How much do you really need to retire? It’s probably a lot less than $1 million

Every few months, someone in the superannuation industry declares that Australians now “need” ar...

South Australian Nationals to open up local oil from Great Australian Bight

Amid out-of-control inflation and impacts from the Middle East conflict, The South Australian Na...

How does your super balance compare to other people your age?

If you have ever checked your super balance and wondered whether you are “behind” for your age, ...