Why Are Girls Still Paying More? The Pink Tax, Exposed

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🧐 Estimated read time | 7 minutes

You walk into a store to buy a raincoat for your toddler. The blue one? €24.99. The pink one — same size, same brand, same material — is €27.99.

It’s not a glitch. It’s not a one-off. It’s not even subtle. It’s a business model.

Girlhood, it turns out, isn’t just a phase. It’s a pricing category.

From baby bottles to backpacks, from glittery toothbrushes to school skirts, raising girls costs more — not because they need more, but because the market figured out that femininity can be sold for a premium. And parents? We’re the ones picking up the tab.

A Gender Tax by Another Name

Let’s clear something up: the Pink Tax isn’t an official tax — it’s a pattern of gender-based pricing, where products marketed to women and girls cost more just because they’re… pinker. Softer. “Cuter.”

Photo of girl in floral pajamas with pink sleep mask
Photo by RDNE Stock project

According to the NYC Department of Consumer Affairs (2015),

women pay on average 7% more than men for comparable products across five major categories, including toys, clothing, and personal care.

This pricing gap shows up disturbingly early:

👶 A 2018 study by ChannelMum found a gender price gap in baby clothes starting at just 12 months.

🎒 Grazia UK (2021) revealed that girls’ school uniforms cost 12% more than boys’, despite using less fabric.

🧸 Starling Bank (2022) found pink toys cost 5% more on average than non-pink ones — even when functionally identical.

“From Cradle to Cane: The Cost of Being a Female Consumer”
Published by: NYC Department of Consumer Affairs
“From Cradle to Cane: The Cost of Being a Female Consumer”
Published by: NYC Department of Consumer Affairs

What are we actually paying for? Branding. Perception. A stereotype wrapped in polyester.

“But It’s Only a Few Euros More…”

That’s the trap. €2 more here, €5 more there — it feels harmless. But it’s cumulative. By the time a girl becomes a woman, she’s been paying a premium on her identity for two decades.

📊 “Pink Tax Over a Lifetime” based on a study from 2015:

U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee (2016):
Gender-based pricing may cost women over $1,300/year, contributing to long-term wealth disparities.

Now, in 2025, this cost has been re-estimated: American women now pay on average $2,381 more per year than men for essentially similar products — adding up to nearly $188,000 over a lifetime, according to a June 2025 report by BOK Financial Advisors.

And here’s the kicker: these aren’t better-quality products. Often, they’re the same — or worse. A pink scooter with fewer features. A shampoo with identical ingredients but a “floral” label slapped on. Same item, different color, higher price. The math is as insulting as it is effective.

So why do we still buy them?

The Psychology of Pretty

Photo of child in pink dress at birthday party
Credit: Souad Fneish / Pexels

It’s not just commerce. It’s culture. Girls are taught from the start that presentation matters. That cuteness is currency. That pink = girl and girl = pleasing.

Marketers didn’t invent this narrative, they just monetised it. And when you’re a parent, that pressure is hard to ignore.

You want your daughter to fit in. To feel seen. You reach for the pink bike, the sparkly bag, the branded tights — not because they’re better, but because they feel… expected. “Right.”

But here’s a question worth asking: Is it actually right? Or just profitable?

The Real Cost of Girlhood

This isn’t just about money. It’s about values. When girls learn their things cost more — and often offer less — what message are we sending?

That beauty trumps practicality?
That being seen matters more than being equal?
That “the girl version” will always come at a cost?

Let’s not pretend this ends with toys and tights. This isn’t just a parenting issue. It’s a society-wide script. But scripts can be rewritten.

The Pink Tax Doesn’t Expire at 18

The pricing gap doesn’t stop when girls grow out of glittery toys and school uniforms, it just evolves. Suddenly, it’s adult razors, skincare, dry cleaning, shampoo, deodorant, even pens. (Remember those pastel-colored “Bic for Her” pens?

4. Woman with oversized pink sunglasses at 30th birthday
Courtesy of Hannah Johnson

This year, U.S. legislators introduced a bill calling for a Treasury-led study of so-called “pink tariffs” — import duties that disproportionately affect women’s clothing. According to early estimates, these tariffs add up to $2–2.5 billion annually in extra costs for women in the U.S. alone.

A 2010 California Assembly study found women paid more 64% of the time for near-identical products. And now, in 2025, new dimensions of this cost are being exposed.

Meanwhile, in Europe, a 2025 German study cited by the European Parliament found items marketed to women were priced higher in 2.3% of cases, compared to 1.4% for men. The EU’s Subcommittee on Tax Matters has since flagged gendered pricing as indirect discrimination, urging the Commission to regulate it.

And this isn’t just policy — it’s painfully visible in the dressing room.

According to a 2025 investigation by FASHION Magazine, women’s basic white T-shirts often cost up to $45 more than men’s for the same brand. Polo Ralph Lauren charged $115 for the women’s version and $69.50 for the men’s despite lower-quality fabric in the women’s shirt.

Fashion editorial style woman in white suit with magazine on face
Credits: Gül Işık / Pexels

The same study found:

🙋‍♀️ 50% of women’s T-shirts were more expensive than men’s

👖 20% of major retailers charged more for women’s jeans

🌿 Women’s tees were more likely to use synthetic blends, while men’s had higher-quality cotton

🎀 Retailers used vague product descriptions and branding (“vintage,” “love”) to justify markup

The result? Women pay more for less — and it’s not just anecdotal, it’s strategic.

So when we say that raising girls is more expensive, we’re not just talking about childhood. We’re talking about a lifetime of economic penalty, coded into both retail strategy and international trade law.

What Can Be Done?

You don’t need a cape. You just need a cart (and maybe a little courage to ask uncomfortable questions in the toy aisle).

Here’s how we start flipping the script:

🛒 Compare before you buy

If two kids’ products differ only by gender and price, choose the better deal — and point it out. Name and shame works wonders in a digital world.

👕 Support unisex, ethical brands

Seek out companies that design for all children, not just the marketing binary. Look for transparency, not trends.

🧠 Teach kids media literacy early

Let your child question why the “girl” toy is pink. Why the “boy” shoes have dinosaurs. Help her see that products are made for profit, not for her identity.

📣 Push for legislation

Some regions are catching on. California banned gender-based pricing in 2023. The more we demand regulation, the more it becomes a global standard.

Can This Be Fixed? Global Attempts at Ending Gender-Based Pricing

Legs-up fashion shot with two-tone heels and newspaper, reading the news.
Credits: Leah Newhouse / Pexels

The good news? Some governments are catching on. In France, gender-based pricing was outlawed in 2014 after consumer groups lobbied against it. California followed in 2023, passing a law requiring retailers to offer similar goods at equal prices, regardless of the target gender.

But the devil is in the loopholes. Companies can still price products differently if they’re marketed as “different enough.” A pink razor with a flexible handle? Totally different product. A floral shampoo instead of citrus? New scent = new SKU = new price point.

TIn Europe, the EU Parliament is applying pressure. Some national governments are investigating, but a unified policy remains out of reach. A few brands and stores made bold statements during peak awareness: New York’s Thompson Chemists offered a “Man Tax” day. Boxed.com ran a “Rethink Pink” initiative. UK stores like John Lewis removed gender labels on toys.

That was then. In 2025, the noise has faded. Most retailers have quietly returned to business as usual.

Girlhood Shouldn’t Be a Luxury

Capitalism found a way to sell girlhood, but we don’t have to keep buying. Let’s raise our girls to believe they can be anything — and let’s stop letting the market charge them more for the privilege. Because the truth is: she isn’t expensive. The system is. And what we normalize today, our daughters will inherit tomorrow.

Sources

  1. NYC Department of Consumer Affairs (2015): From Cradle to Cane: The Cost of Being a Female Consumer
  2. ChannelMum / Independent UK (2018): ‘Gender Pay Gap’ in Baby Clothes Starts at 12 Months
  3. Grazia UK (2021): Girls’ School Uniforms Cost 12% More Than Boys’
  4. Starling Bank (2022): Make Pocket Money Equal
  5. The Higher Cost of Being a Woman
  6. Fashion Magazine: What Is the Status of the Pink Tax in 2025?

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