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Duration based pricing

price flat 1

Use the duration based pricing to define prices for specific rental durations and seasons to make it cheaper for longer durations and low seasons.

  1. Decide to keep or discard your products base price. The typical case is discarding to create a more detailed pricing.

  2. Define per row for each duration a price. You don´ t have to setup a row for each duration. Set a rule / row like that:

    1 hour = 10$ and 10$ each extra hour

    (that defines: 2 hours=20$, 3 hours=30$. 4 hours=40$)

    if its cheaper for 5 and more hours, create a new row like that:

    5 hours = 45$ and 5$ each extra hour

  3. Add more rows for further adjustments if you need to.

  4. A line like the first line in the following image means:

    1 day costs €250 and each extra day costs €0 more. This means that 2 and 3 days also cost €250 in total. In other words, in this example you also pay the 3-day price for 1 or 2 days. It is therefore a (minimum) price for 1 to 3 days of rental. Only from the fourth day onwards do you have to pay more in the example (namely €325).

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Base price behavior

Before you start building your new rule, decide if you want to set the base price of your product to be the minimum or discarded entirely. Minimum means, you will add something on top. The typical case is to discard the base price and create a full set of price steps.

Pricing+rules+ +Temporal+2


Add a time restraint

In case you want that the pricing rule will only apply on certain days or dates (seasons), you can add a time restraint to limit the pricing to certain time periods.

You can give more than one Seasons to one price rule. By creating / cloning of price rules, you can set up different price rules for different seasons

Pricing+rules+ +Time+constraint

→ Read more about time restraints

Knowledge Hub, Pricing Rules