If you’re getting hit with ‘It’s too expensive’, you’re not hearing a pricing problem, you’re hearing a clarity problem. Handle it badly and you’ll either discount your way into misery or lose deals you should win. If you want a wider foundation on selling properly, cross-reference Sales & Client Acquisition: The Complete Founder’s Playbook and then come back here for the exact language.
In this article, we’re going to discuss how to:
- Diagnose what a price objection is really telling you
- Use proven phrasing that protects margin without getting pushy
- Run small tests this week to increase confidence and win rate
Price Objections: What They Really Mean In The Room
A price objection is rarely about the number. It’s usually one of four things: they don’t see enough value, they don’t trust you to deliver, they can’t justify it internally, or they’re using price to negotiate because it’s the only lever they’ve got.
Here’s the practical framing: a price objection is a request for a better trade. Your job is to improve the trade without giving away the farm.
- If they say ‘too expensive’ quickly, you’ve not anchored value.
- If they compare you to a cheaper option, you’ve not differentiated outcome.
- If they need to ‘think about it’, they’re short on certainty, not cash.
- If they push for a discount late, procurement is doing procurement.
Founder rule: you don’t ‘handle’ price objections by debating price. You handle them by improving understanding, reducing risk and keeping the deal structure fair.
Gather The Right Signals Before You Start Defending Price
You can’t be confident in price if you’ve got no evidence. Spend 2 hours gathering signals, internal first, then public. This gives you calm, not bravado.
Internal Signals You Can Pull Today
Open your CRM and your bank feed. You’re looking for patterns, not perfect maths.
- Win rate by price band: e.g. £2k to £5k, £5k to £10k.
- Discount rate: average discount given, and where it shows up in the funnel.
- Sales cycle length: if discounts shorten cycles, note it. If not, stop doing it.
- Delivery time and rework: how often you ‘fix it for free’ and what it costs you.
- Top 10 objections: copy the exact words from call notes, no paraphrasing.
Completion check: you should be able to answer in one sentence, ‘Our average discount is X% and it does or doesn’t change time to close.’ If you can’t, you’re guessing.
Public Signals That Stop You Underpricing
Pricing confidence comes from context. In 30 to 60 minutes:
- Competitor positioning: not their price page, their promise. What outcome do they sell?
- Buyer job posts: they reveal budgets and priorities. If they’re hiring a £70k ops lead, they can pay for a £7k improvement.
- Case studies in your space: look for ROI language you can mirror.
You’re not trying to match competitors. You’re trying to justify your number with outcomes buyers already believe are valuable.
Build An Offer That Makes Price Less Important
Most founders pitch features. Buyers pay for reduced pain, increased upside, or avoided risk. If your offer is fuzzy, price becomes the only concrete thing in the conversation.
Use this one-sentence offer template and fill it in:
‘We help [specific buyer] achieve [measurable outcome] in [timeframe] without [common headache], using [your method], priced at [£X] because it replaces [costly alternative].’
Then tighten the offer with three artefacts that shrink uncertainty:
- A simple scope boundary: what’s in, what’s out, what ‘done’ looks like.
- A proof asset: a before/after metric, a mini case, a screenshot, a sample deliverable.
- A risk reducer: milestone payments, a pilot, a performance trigger, or a clear exit point.
If you do this properly, you’ll notice price objections move from ‘too expensive’ to ‘help me choose the right option’, which is where you want them.
Proven Phrasing For The 6 Most Common Price Objections
You’re not looking for a magic line. You’re looking for a calm sequence: acknowledge, clarify, quantify, then trade. Practise these until they sound like you.
1) ‘It’s Too Expensive’
Use this: ‘Got it. Before we talk numbers, can I check what you’re comparing it to: another provider, an internal hire, or doing nothing?’
Why it works: it forces a comparison frame. You can only be ‘expensive’ relative to something.
Follow with: ‘If we hit [outcome] in [time], what’s that worth to you in £ or hours saved?’
2) ‘We Don’t Have Budget’
Use this: ‘Understood. Is this a timing issue, or is this not a priority compared to other spend?’
Then trade: ‘If we started with the smallest version that still gets a result, would £[lower option] be workable, or should we park it until next quarter?’
This protects your pricing integrity. You offer a smaller scope, not a cheaper version of the same work.
3) ‘Competitor X Is Cheaper’
Use this: ‘They might be the right fit. When you say cheaper, are you looking at like-for-like scope, or a different outcome?’
Differentiate: ‘Our price includes [risk reducer] and [deliverable]. If you remove those, it looks cheaper, but it usually costs more in rework.’
Founder tip: keep this factual. No trash talk. Let your buyer conclude.
4) ‘Can You Do A Discount?’
Use this: ‘I can sometimes move on price, but I can’t do it for nothing. If we adjust the price, what do you want to adjust in return: scope, payment terms, or timeline?’
This turns discounting into a trade, not a giveaway. You’re teaching the buyer how you operate.
5) ‘Let Me Think About It’ (Hidden Price Objection)
Use this: ‘Of course. When someone says that, it’s normally one of three things: the price, the priority, or the confidence in the outcome. Which one is it for you?’
Then shut up. Silence is your friend. If it’s price objections, you’ve now got the real issue on the table.
6) ‘We Need Approval’
Use this: ‘Makes sense. What does your approver need to see to say yes: ROI, risk, or delivery plan?’
Offer help: ‘If I send a one-page summary with the numbers and the plan, can you get it in front of them by [date]?’
This converts a vague delay into a next step with a deadline.
Validate Your Price Fast With Small Tests (7 To 14 Days)
You don’t gain confidence by ‘thinking about pricing’. You gain it by running controlled experiments and looking at results. Here’s a simple validation path you can run in under 2 weeks.
Test 1: Raise Price For New Leads Only
Pick one offering and increase price by 10% to 15% for new inbound only. Keep everything else the same.
- Success signal: conversion rate drops less than 10% while average deal value rises.
- Failure signal: the same objection rate but earlier drop-offs, meaning your value story needs work.
Test 2: Add A Higher Anchor Option
Create three options: Core, Plus, Premium. Price Premium at 1.8x to 2.2x Core and include something buyers value that doesn’t kill your margin (priority scheduling, quarterly reviews, extra training session).
Measure how often Core feels ‘reasonable’ after showing Premium. This reduces price objections without changing your baseline price.
Test 3: Pilot With A Clear Exit
Offer a 14-day pilot with a pass/fail outcome and a conversion path: ‘If we hit X, we roll into the full engagement at £Y.’
This is not a cheap taster. It’s risk management, and it works when buyers are nervous.
Pricing And Unit Economics That Survive Reality
If you’re a founder, your real enemy is not losing a deal. It’s winning the wrong deal at the wrong price and then spending 6 weeks resenting it.
This is why pricing on sales calls must be grounded in numbers — not emotion, pressure, or the fear of losing a prospect.
Do this quick calculation for each service line:
- Gross margin check: (Price minus delivery cost) divided by price. If you’re under 60% on a service business, discounts will hurt fast.
- Effective hourly rate: Price divided by total hours (including calls, admin, revisions). If you’re landing below your target, price objections are doing you a favour.
- Cost of acquisition: if a deal takes 10 hours of sales time and your loaded rate is £75/hour, that’s £750 before delivery begins.
Here’s a simple example: you sell a £6k project. Delivery is 35 hours at £50/hour (£1,750). Sales effort averages 6 hours at £75/hour (£450). Tools and overhead allocation £300. Your true cost is £2,500. Gross margin is £3,500, or 58%. If you discount 15%, margin drops to £2,600, or 51%. That’s the difference between building a team and staying stuck.
When you know your numbers, you can handle price objections with a straight face because you know what you can and can’t move on.
Operational Guardrails So Discounts Don’t Eat Your Week
Discounting is rarely a one-off. Once you do it, it sets a precedent inside your business. Put guardrails in place so you can negotiate without chaos.
- Discount authority: only one person can approve discounts, and there’s a cap (for example, 10%).
- Trade rules: every discount must be exchanged for something, like upfront payment, reduced scope, shorter timeline, or a case study.
- Expiry dates: any revised quote expires in 7 days. This stops endless circular negotiation.
- Scope lock: define what counts as ‘extra’. If it’s not written, it’s not included.
Completion check: open your last five proposals. If two of them have different scope language for the same offer, you’re creating your own price objections.
Mini Cases: What This Looks Like In The Wild
These are not fairy tales. They’re the kinds of moments you’ll recognise.
Micro case 1: B2B SaaS, Midlands
They priced onboarding at £3,500 and got constant pushback. They added a Premium option at £7,500 including weekly implementation calls and internal enablement. 30% chose Premium, and Core stopped feeling ‘expensive’. Price objections reduced without changing delivery effort much.
Micro case 2: Boutique finance consultancy, London
Prospects demanded discounts late. The founder introduced a trade rule: 8% discount only for payment upfront within 48 hours. Half paid upfront, half stayed at full price. Cashflow improved, and negotiation time dropped because the boundary was clear.
Micro case 3: Performance marketing agency, Manchester
They were losing deals on ‘too expensive’ at £5k/month. They ran a 14-day pilot tied to one metric, cost per lead under £X. Close rate increased, and the pilot filtered out tyre-kickers. Their average retention improved because buyers started with proof.
Risks And Hedges When Handling Price Objections
There’s a right way to be flexible and a wrong way to be desperate. Watch for these risks.
- Risk: You answer too quickly. Hedge: ask one clarifying question before you defend anything.
- Risk: You discount to ‘save’ the deal. Hedge: trade discounts for scope or terms, always.
- Risk: You over-educate. Hedge: use proof and numbers, then stop talking.
- Risk: You take the wrong customers. Hedge: be explicit about who you’re not for. Cheap buyers are rarely loyal.
- Risk: Your team improvises pricing. Hedge: standard options and written boundaries in proposals.
Price objections aren’t a personal insult. They’re a signal. Treat them like data, not drama.
Do / Don’t Checklist For Handling Price Objections
- Do ask what they’re comparing your price to before you justify anything.
- Do quantify value in their language, like revenue, hours, risk and speed.
- Do present options so buyers can choose a fit, not argue about a number.
- Don’t apologise for your price, it tells them you don’t believe it.
- Don’t drop price without trading for terms, scope, or commitment.
- Don’t keep negotiating if your unit economics break, walk away politely.
Download The Objection Handling Playbook And Put This Into Practice
If you want to stop winging it and build consistent confidence when price objections show up, download the Objection Handling Playbook: 27 Responses That Win Deals Without Pressure and use it on your next 5 calls. You’ll have ready-to-go phrasing, trade options and a simple structure that protects margin while keeping the conversation human.
- Key takeaways: Treat price objections as a value and risk conversation, not a battle over numbers.
- Key takeaways: Validate pricing with small tests in 7 to 14 days, and trade discounts for something tangible.
- Key takeaways: Protect margin with unit economics, scope boundaries and a discount policy you’ll actually follow.
FAQ For Handling Price Objections
Why do I keep getting price objections even when I’m not the most expensive?
Because ‘expensive’ usually means ‘unclear’. If your outcome, process, and proof aren’t sharp, buyers default to comparing on price.
Should I ever discount to win a deal?
Yes, but only as a trade for something that improves your position, like upfront payment, reduced scope, faster timeline, or a case study. Never discount just to relieve pressure in the moment.
What’s the best first question to ask when someone says ‘too expensive’?
Ask what they’re comparing it to: another supplier, hiring internally, or doing nothing. That question reveals the real benchmark and stops you defending a number in a vacuum.
How do I handle procurement pushing for 20% off?
Stay calm and move to deal structure: ‘We can look at price if we also adjust scope or terms.’ If your margins can’t support it, offer a smaller package rather than cutting the same work.
How can I make buyers focus on value instead of price?
Quantify outcomes in £ and time, then back it with proof, like a case study, a sample deliverable, or a clear delivery plan. When value is concrete, price objections reduce naturally.
Is offering three packages manipulative?
No, it’s clarity. Options help buyers self-select based on need and risk tolerance, and it gives you room to negotiate without wrecking your core pricing.
What if I handle the price objection well but they still say no?
Good, you’ve saved time and protected your standards. Log the reason, look for patterns across lost deals, and adjust either the offer, the targeting, or the proof.
How many times should I follow up after a price objection?
Set a clear next step on the call, then follow up 2 to 3 times over 7 to 10 days with specific value or proof. If there’s no movement, close the loop and move on.
