How the Pandemic is Changing Holiday Shopping Habits

 

The holiday season may be well underway, but with a global pandemic wreaking havoc on businesses, the economy and jobs, the National Retail Federation’s annual consumer survey breaks down changes in planned holiday spending this year.

The annual NRF consumer survey found that individuals plan to spend $998 on average on gifts, decorations and other holiday-related purchases in 2020.

Here’s the breakdown:

$650 — the average amount consumers plan to spend on gifts for family, friends and co-workers.

$230 — the average amount consumers plan to spend on non-gift holiday purchases such as food and decorations.

$117 — the average amount consumers plan to spend on themselves or their families.

“Given the pandemic, there is uncertainty about consumers’ willingness to spend, but with the economy improving most have the ability to spend,” NRF Chief Economist Jack Kleinhenz said. “Consumers have experienced a difficult year but will likely spend more than anyone would have expected just a few months ago.

“After all they’ve been through, we think there’s going to be a psychological factor that they owe it to themselves and their families to have a better-than-normal holiday. There are risks to the economy if the virus continues to spread, but as long as consumers remain confident and upbeat, they will spend for the holiday season.”

Expected spending

Male consumers plan to spend $1,105.97 on average on holiday-related purchases. Women will be a bit more frugal — taking advantage of big sales and discounts — to spend $896.79 on average.

Shopping trends and factors

Here’s where consumers said they planned to shop this year:

  • 60% of consumers said they planned to shop online this year.
  • 45% of consumers said they planned to shop at Department Stores this year.
  • 43% of consumers said they planned to shop at Discount Stores this year.
  • 23% of consumers said they planned to shop at Local/Small Businesses this year.

The survey found that sales and discounts were the most important factor while shopping with 66 percent of consumers agreeing.

Another 58 percent of consumers said the quality of the merchandise is important.

Fifty-six percent of consumers said the selection of merchandise is important.

Despite the anticipated increase in online shopping this year, only 33 percent of consumers said an easy-to-use website or mobile site was important.

Similarly, just 49 percent of consumers said free shipping/shipping promotions were important.

Recent Articles

Even without the representation and recognition they deserve, women have always been at the center of the cannabis movement.
There are objects Americans buy because they need them, and objects Americans buy because they let them be a certain kind of person. A perfectly functional version exists, usually for a fraction of the price. But the other version comes with a name, a story, and a reason to pay extra.
Walk into any warehouse rave, desert gathering, or rooftop after-hours in 2026, and you’ll feel it: the psychedelic underground is back, louder, weirder, and far more self-aware than its ‘60s predecessor ever imagined.
In 62 BC, Julius Caesar announced his plan to divorce his second wife, Pompeia. She had been involved in an ancient Roman sex scandal, accused of flirting with another man during a women-only religious event.
ile Mike Wittenberg sat in a Dominican Republic prison, a thought occurred to him. “I could appreciate flushing the toilet,” he said. “When you’re in a third-world jail without running water 23.5 hours a day, you learn to appreciate the little things.”
When it comes to marketing, cannabis is different from every other consumer good available today. If sales start to dip in traditional retail, you can simply increase ad spending. However, with companies like Google, Meta, and even traditional broadcasters placing strict bans or severe limitations on cannabis advertising, the standard “pay-to-play” system just doesn’t work.
It feels impossible sometimes to escape the more ridiculousness aspects of pop culture—like pickleball, whatever a Labubu is, and the inevitable media frenzy surrounding Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's upcoming wedding. Thankfully, there’s at least one trend that’s still on the rise that I can get behind, which is kratom.
When Adelia Carrillo (Fakhri) and Parisa Rad first sat down for brunch in Phoenix, AZ, with a few other women in the cannabis industry, they had no idea how that moment would change the trajectory of their lives. “The energy in that room was transformative,” Adelia says.