Experience Premium in Consumer Search: Evidence from Drivers’ Refueling Behavior
Satoshi Imahie
No 26-1757, TSE Working Papers from Toulouse School of Economics (TSE)
Abstract:
Why do uninformed consumers pay more? A long-standing answer is market unfamiliarity. Yet how much it contributes to information frictions, and whether it fades with experience, have not been directly measured. I answer these questions using millions of fuel purchases by Japanese drivers. Identification exploits two kinds of variation in familiarity, from travel and relocation. Comparing the same driver across markets, I find that unfamiliarity accounts for 62% of the price gap between informed and uninformed consumers, while persistent individual differences explain the rest. This unfamiliarity-driven gap (the experience premium) declines with repeated purchases, consistent with learning in consumer search.
Keywords: Consumer Search; Information Friction; State Dependence; Learning, Gasoline (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-06
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:tse:wpaper:131884
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