Festervand et al. [1986] found that previous experience via a given shopping channel is negatively related to perceived risks associated with future purchase in that channel. If extending this finding to the online shopping context, online shopping experience should lead to a reduction in perceived risks associated with purchasing online and hence, greater online purchase intentions. Research shows that online shopping experience positively influences shoppers’ perceptions of online shopping and intention to purchase online [Forsythe and Shi 2003; Kuhlmeier and Knight 2005] and that risk perceptions associated with online shopping decrease as online shopping experiences increase [Forsythe and Shi 2003, Pires et al. 2004]. However, unprecedentedly high concerns among current online shoppers over providing personal information to online retailers remain [Vijayan 2005]. Thus, a question exists as to whether it is possible that some types of risks, such as privacy risk, may increase as online shopping experience accumulates, whereas perceptions of other types of risk, such as product and financial risks decrease with online shopping experience.