Thinking, Fast and Slow · Daniel Kahneman

The framing effect examples

Curated by · reviewed 2026-06-01

The framing effect is how the same fact feels different depending on how it's worded — gain vs loss, 90% vs 10%, cheap vs expensive. Examples:

What is the framing effect? Read the full idea →

5 examples of the framing effect

  1. "90% fat-free" vs "10% fat"

    Identical food, opposite feeling. "90% fat-free" sells; "10% fat" sits on the shelf.

  2. Surgery "survival" vs "mortality"

    Told a procedure has a 90% survival rate, patients choose it; told it has a 10% death rate — the same number — many refuse.

  3. "Save $5" vs "avoid a $5 fee"

    A cash discount and a card surcharge can be the same price, but "avoid the fee" stings, so shoppers pay cash.

  4. "$1 a day" vs "$365 a year"

    Subscriptions feel tiny priced per day and large priced per year — same cost, very different yes.

  5. Tax "refund" vs "bonus"

    Money framed as getting your own money back feels different from a windfall, changing how freely people spend it.

How to spot it in yourself

You'll forget most of this by next week.

That's just how memory works. Lock the framing effect in with a 5-minute active-recall session — spaced repetition, no signup.

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