You walk into a store. First thing you see is a jacket for 25,000 rupees. Too expensive. Then you spot another for 8,000 rupees. Suddenly, that feels reasonable. You buy it. You just got anchored.
Anchoring is a mental shortcut. Your brain grabs the first number it sees and uses it as a reference point. Everything after that gets compared to the anchor. Retailers know this. That's why they show you the premium model first or display a high "original price" next to a discounted one. The anchor makes the real target look like a bargain.
This happens everywhere. Restaurant menus put a costly dish at the top so the middle-priced one feels affordable. Negotiators throw out an extreme first offer to shift your expectations. Once you see the anchor, you can't unsee it. To break free, you need a neutral reference. If you want to estimate your EMI payments without being anchored to the showroom number, calculate the actual cost first.
Hidden truth: The anchor doesn't even need to be real. A crossed-out fake price works just as well as a genuine one. Your brain treats any number it sees first as the truth. That's not stupidity. That's how attention works.
Next time you see a "was 20,000, now 10,000," ask yourself: Was it ever really 20,000? And would you pay 10,000 if you'd never seen the higher number? That question saves you money.
