Costco's founder once told the company's current CEO, 'if you raise the [price of the] effing hot dog, I will kill you'
- Costco has charged $1.50 for its hot dog and soda combo since 1985, and a quote from Costco founder Jim Sinegal explains why that is.
- When Costco's now-CEO Craig Jelinek approached Sinegal about raising the price of the combo, Sinegal told him "I'd kill you" if Jelinek raised the price.
- So Jelinek figured out a solution: stop buying hot dogs from Hebrew National and build factories to make Kirkland Signature brand hot dogs.
- In a January shareholders meeting, Jelinek said Costco has "no plans to take that hot dog above a buck fifty."
Costco has charged $1.50 for its iconic hot dog and soda combo since 1985.
An old quote from Costco founder Jim Sinegal about why that is has resurfaced on Twitter after a user posted screenshots from a 2018 Mental Floss article.
When Costco's current CEO Craig Jelinek once approached Sinegal, then CEO, about raising the price of the hot dog, Sinegal told him, "If you raise the [price of the] effing hot dog, I will kill you. Figure it out."
In 2009, Jelinek did figure it out. Costco stopped using its longtime hot dog supplier, Hebrew National and built a Kirkland Signature hot dog factory in Los Angeles, and later built another one in Chicago. The new factories reduced the production costs for the hot dog, allowing Costco to continue selling the menu item for $1.50.
Jelinek told local Seattle Eastside publication 425Business in 2018 that he expected people would still buy the hot dog if the price were raised to $1.75.
"It would not be that big of a deal. People would still buy [it]," Jelinek told 425Business. "But it's the mindset that when you think of Costco, you think of the $1.50 hot dog."
Jelinek took over as CEO when Sinegal retired in 2012, and the hot dog's popularity has only grown. In fiscal 2019, Costco sold 151 million hot dog combos for a total of about $226.5 million. And Jelinek said in Costco's shareholder meeting in January that he now has no intention of raising the price of the hot dog.
"We have no plans to take that hot dog above a buck fifty," he told shareholders. "End of story."