The economic concept of sliding scale at its most basic: people pay as they are able to for services, events and items. Those with access to more resources pay more and thus provide the cushion for those with less access to pay less, creating a sustainable economic underpinning for said services, events and items. Click here to learn more.
If you’re not sure which price point to choose, please read below for guidance. There’s no right answer, and people who pay more don’t get a better experience. If making monthly payments, you can change your price at any time, and it will apply to your next payment. Please email me to make this change.
Sliding Scale Info
Seed
$19 per month
Consider paying this amount if:
You regularly struggle to meet your basic needs
You qualify for government assistance (food stamps, Medicaid, housing support, etc.)
You have no access to financial savings or inherited wealth
You are unemployed, underemployed, or unable to work
You are accruing debt to meet your basic needs
Sprout
$49 per month
Consider paying this amount if:
You sometimes struggle to meet your basic needs
You rent lower-end housing or face housing instability
You have limited or no financial savings
You are underemployed, unemployed, or working multiple jobs to make ends meet
You carry significant debt that limits your financial flexibility
Growth
$79 per month
(full price)
Consider paying this amount if:
You are employed and regularly meet your basic needs
You have stable housing
You have occasional access to savings or disposable income
You may have some debt, but it doesn’t prevent you from covering essentials
You can afford small luxuries (new clothes, dining out, entertainment) without hardship
Thrive
$99 per month
(pay it forward)
Consider paying this amount if:
You can comfortably meet all of your basic needs
You own your home or other property
You have access to financial savings, retirement accounts, or investments
You have a relatively high earning capacity (through education, career, privilege, or assets), even if you’re not currently using it
You travel recreationally or have disposable income for leisure activities