The collective action problem of group delivery
Mancur Olson’s 1965 The Logic of Collective Action identified a principle that applies directly to group delivery orders: the larger the group, the less each person feels responsible for shared costs. In a two-person order, you both see the delivery fee and mentally split it. In a six-person order, the delivery fee feels like someone else’s problem.
Uri Gneezy, Ernan Haruvy, and Hadas Yafe demonstrated the real-world consequence in their landmark 2004 field experiment. When diners knew costs would be split equally, they ordered 37% more than when paying individually. The same dynamic plays out in group delivery orders: when one person’s credit card absorbs the entire fee stack, everyone else’s ordering behavior is unconstrained by price signals.
The key insight The Fee Diffusion Effect
When delivery fees are paid by one person and split later, each additional group member reduces individual perceived responsibility for shared costs — leading to larger orders, more add-ons, and higher total fees that the organizer absorbs disproportionately.
This is why the person who organizes the group order often ends up subsidizing it. They pay the full fee stack at checkout, then either absorb the difference or face the awkward task of itemizing every charge. And when something goes wrong — missing items, wrong orders — splitting refunds and credits adds another layer of complexity. Xia, Monroe, and Cox found in their 2004 Journal of Consumer Research study that 78% of consumers perceive surcharges as unfair — meaning the organizer is likely to feel taken advantage of but unlikely to say anything about it.
Sources: Olson, The Logic of Collective Action (1965); Gneezy, Haruvy & Yafe, “The Inefficiency of Splitting the Bill,” The Economic Journal (2004); Xia, Monroe & Cox, “Consumer Responses to Price Surcharges,” Journal of Consumer Research (2004)