She is a best-selling author, podcast host, retreat leader, therapist turned mentor, Yoga Teacher trainer, and tequila connoisseur (not really, but she does enjoy sipping on a good pour).
You’ve poured your heart into planning a retreat – the venue, the schedule, the transformation you’re going to create – and then you sit down to write up the details and price it out and suddenly your brain turns to mush.
How much should you charge? What should you include? Why does everyone else’s retreat look so polished and yours feels like a Google Doc nightmare?
Here’s the thing: most retreat business owners aren’t failing because their retreat is bad. They’re failing because their package doesn’t communicate value. There’s a big difference between what you offer and what your guest perceives they’re getting- and the gap is where retreats die on the sales page.
Today we’re fixing that.
Here’s what most people do: they list a bunch of stuff – meals included, yoga twice a day, airport transfers, a journal, some breathwork – and slap a price on it.
That’s a feature list. Not a transformation package.
A transformation package tells a story. It answers the question your guest is silently asking: “Will this actually change something for me?”
Perceived value isn’t about how much you cram in. It’s about how clearly you connect each element to the outcome your guest wants. If they can’t see themselves in your package description, they won’t buy it – no matter how amazing it is.
The fix? Start with transformation, not transactions.
When it comes to retreat pricing and planning, what you include matters – but how you present it matters more. Let’s break it down.
These are table stakes. If you leave them out of your listing, people assume they’re not included and that creates friction:
Don’t just list these. Paint a picture. Instead of “meals included,” try “nourishing farm-to-table meals crafted to fuel your energy throughout the experience.” Same thing, completely different vibe.
These are the elements that ‘justify’ your price and separate you from every other retreat in your niche:
You don’t need all of these. You need the ones that are most aligned with what your specific guest cares about and that fit YOUR retreat model.
Some of the highest-perceived-value items in your retreat business cost almost nothing to include:
These touches tell your guests: someone thought about me. And that feeling? That’s what gets you referrals and repeat buyers.
Let’s talk numbers – because basic math is where retreat leaders consistently leave money on the table.
If you’ve already read our post on retreat pricing and planning fundamentals, you know the basics: cover your costs, add your profit margin, don’t price based on fear. But transformational packaging adds another layer.
Your price needs to match the perceived tier of your offer.
A $1000 retreat better feel like a $1000 retreat – clean, simple, no frills. A $5,000+ retreat better feel like a $5,000+ retreat – elevated, curated, exclusive. If your price and your packaging are mismatched, your guests feel it, even if they can’t name it.
Here’s a quick gut-check framework for your retreat business pricing:
Be honest about which tier your retreat actually belongs in – and then make sure your packaging matches it. Don’t charge premium prices for a budget experience, and don’t undersell a premium experience because you’re scared.
Your guests are not buying yoga sessions and organic meals. They’re buying the version of themselves that comes home from your retreat.
They want to feel seen. They want to feel different at the end than they did at the beginning. They want to go back to their real life with something – a new perspective, a healed wound, a clearer direction, a deeper breath.
So when you build your package, ask yourself: does every single element I’m including serve the transformation I’m promising?
If you’re leading a retreat for burned-out women, they may not care about the thread count on the sheets as much as they care about having zero responsibilities for 4 days. Lead with that. If you’re leading a business retreat, your guest wants clarity and momentum – lead with outcomes, not activities.
The retreat leaders who sell out consistently? They know exactly who they’re talking to, and they build their package around that person’s deepest desire – not a generic “wellness” experience.
You’ve built a great transformation package. Now don’t bury it in bullet points.
Here’s a simple structure that works for retreat businesses at every level:
And please – use real language. Not “immersive transformational journey.” Tell me what we’re actually doing together. The more specific you are with your offer, the more trustworthy you sound. Vague language signals you’re not sure what you’re selling.
There’s no magic number – but aim for meaningful over maximal. Five inclusions that are each clearly connected to your guest’s desired outcome beat fifteen items thrown together hoping something lands. Quality of communication beats quantity of features every time.
Both can work. Flat pricing is simpler and creates a cleaner decision for your guest. Tiered pricing (e.g., shared room vs. private room, or early bird bonus vs. standard price) gives you flexibility and creates urgency. If you’re newer, start with one price and make it easy to say yes. You can add tiers as you grow. Check out this podcast episode to hear more about my thoughts on pricing.
Then you’re not communicating it well enough – and that’s a packaging problem, not a retreat problem. Make sure every inclusion is called out explicitly and connected to a benefit. Don’t assume guests will figure it out. Tell them directly: “You’ll arrive to a welcome gift in your room, because we want you to feel taken care of from the moment you walk in.”
If it fills easily and everyone says “that was so worth it,” you might be underpriced. If you’re struggling to fill it, it could be price – but more often, it’s the messaging. Before you lower your price, audit your packaging language. Are you communicating the value clearly? Are you speaking to the right person? Price is often the last problem, not the first.
Short answer: no – and this is important. In most places, selling or bundling travel (flights, transportation packages) requires a licensed travel agent certification. If you’re not licensed, including travel in your retreat package isn’t just logistically messy – it can expose you to serious legal liability. Keep it simple: handle your retreat experience, and let your guests handle their own travel. Direct them to arrival logistics (nearest airport, ground transport options, recommended arrival times) in your pre-retreat communications, but don’t book or sell it on their behalf unless you’re properly licensed to do so.
If you’ve been guessing your way through pricing, inclusions, and how to position your retreat business – it’s time to stop winging it.
The Retreat Leaders Academy gives you the exact framework to build, price, and package your retreats so they sell out – without the chaos, the second-guessing, or the burnout.
This is built for newer retreat leaders who are done with hobby retreats and ready to run a real, profitable business.
>>> Join the Retreat Leaders Academy and learn how to build and sell retreats that are worth every single dollar you charge.
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