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Testing Social Norms and Financial Incentives to Increase Reusable Cups Consumption in a Real-World Café

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  • Yonatan Meir

    (Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology, Reichman University, Herzliya 4610101, Israel)

  • Guy Hochman

    (Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology, Reichman University, Herzliya 4610101, Israel)

Abstract

Behavioral interventions are widely used to promote sustainable consumption, but their effectiveness under high-friction real-world conditions remains uncertain, especially when multiple tools are combined. We report a quasi-experimental natural field study conducted in a busy urban café in Tel Aviv, Israel, examining the isolated and combined effects of a localized identity-based social-norm cue and a small financial incentive on reusable cup adoption. Across four consecutive weeks and 9414 hot-beverage transactions, a baseline week was followed by a norm condition, a 1 NIS discount condition, and a combined condition. Reusable cup use increased from 3.33% at baseline to 3.59% in the norm week, 4.19% in the incentive week, and 3.72% in the combined week, but none of these changes reached statistical significance. The financial incentive produced the largest descriptive increase, whereas the combined intervention did not outperform the incentive alone. Across the intervention period, reusable cup use exceeded the number expected under the baseline rate by approximately 35 purchases. These bounded null findings suggest that low-cost behavioral tools may yield only modest gains in convenience-driven consumption settings and that combining policy tools does not necessarily generate additive effects. The study contributes ecologically grounded evidence on the boundary conditions of sustainable behavior change and highlights the importance of testing behavioral policies under realistic implementation constraints.

Suggested Citation

  • Yonatan Meir & Guy Hochman, 2026. "Testing Social Norms and Financial Incentives to Increase Reusable Cups Consumption in a Real-World Café," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(11), pages 1-18, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:11:p:5774-:d:1960947
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