Holiday retail spending hits $964 billion, up 3.8% from last year

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American shoppers spent a record $964.4 billion during the 2023 holiday season, a 3.8% increase from the year before, cementing one of the clearest signs that consumer spending remained surprisingly durable even as higher interest rates and inflation continued to pressure household budgets. The number quickly became a benchmark for retailers because it showed that demand did not simply hold up during the most important shopping stretch of the year. It also gave the industry a new reference point for how much holiday spending the U.S. consumer could sustain in a tougher economic climate. That figure still matters because it captured more than a strong season. It marked a transition. Retailers were no longer relying on the extraordinary distortions of the pandemic era, yet shoppers were still willing to spend at historically high levels across both stores and digital channels. As the industry now pushes toward even larger holiday totals, the $964.4 billion season stands out as the point when resilient spending began to look less like a temporary surprise and more like the new baseline.

A Record That Matched the Industry’s Expectations

The National Retail Federation said the 2023 holiday total landed near the top of its expected range, after it had forecast growth of 3% to 4% over the prior year. That made the result important not only because it was a record, but because it confirmed that the trade group’s view of the consumer had been largely correct. Even with borrowing costs elevated and inflation still affecting everyday purchases, households continued to buy gifts, seasonal items, electronics, apparel and home goods at a pace strong enough to keep the retail sector expanding. NRF builds its holiday measure from U.S. Census Bureau retail sales data, focusing on November and December while excluding automobile dealers, gasoline stations and restaurants. That approach is intended to isolate what the industry considers core holiday retail demand. It is not an official government holiday total, but it has become the number retailers, analysts and financial media use most often to judge whether the season was a success. In practical terms, the result showed that consumers were still willing to spend even after the easy tailwinds of earlier years had faded. A strong labor market helped, and so did steady wage growth, but retailers also benefited from the fact that shoppers had become more strategic rather than simply more cautious. They looked for promotions, compared prices more aggressively and shifted more purchases online, yet they did not abandon the holiday season.

Why the Number Deserves a Closer Look

The $964.4 billion figure is powerful, but it is also narrower than many casual readers may assume. Because NRF excludes fuel, autos and restaurants, the total does not represent every dollar spent by Americans during the holidays. It represents a goods-focused slice of the season, one that is especially useful for judging retailers that depend on gift buying and discretionary merchandise. That matters because the shape of holiday spending has changed. The Census Bureau’s holiday season data highlights show a retail landscape in which e-commerce, mail-order activity and specialized store categories play a growing role alongside traditional brick-and-mortar formats. In other words, the holiday season is no longer just a department store and mall story. It is increasingly a digital logistics story, a convenience story and a promotions story. Understanding those boundaries makes the headline more meaningful, not less. The $964.4 billion total showed that Americans were still spending heavily on gifts and retail merchandise, but it did not suggest that every corner of the consumer economy was equally strong. Some categories outperformed, some lagged and many retailers had to work harder through discounting and targeted offers to keep carts full.

Online Shopping Helped Drive the Momentum

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freestocks.org/Pexels
One of the clearest reasons the retail industry kept growing is that online sales continued to gain share. In its report on the 2023 season, NRF said non-store and online sales rose 8.2% to $276.8 billion, a sign that e-commerce was still expanding even after the explosive gains of earlier years had slowed. That digital strength gave retailers another engine for growth at a time when many consumers were prioritizing convenience and comparison shopping. That pattern has continued. Adobe, which tracks a large share of U.S. e-commerce transactions, said in its 2025 holiday forecast that online spending was expected to reach $253.4 billion, up 5.3% from the year before. Reuters, citing the same Adobe data, noted that the pace of online growth had cooled from the prior year but still remained strong enough to produce fresh records, underscoring how large the digital base has become rather than suggesting any real retreat in demand. The mix of purchases has evolved as well. Adobe projected a rise in mobile shopping and continued use of buy now, pay later services, trends that speak to how consumers are adapting to higher prices without fully stepping away from holiday traditions. For retailers, that has meant more than simply listing products online. It has required faster fulfillment, more personalized offers and sharper pricing during key shopping windows.

The Bigger Story Is the Path Toward $1 Trillion

The reason the 2023 total still resonates is that it now looks like a stepping stone rather than a peak. NRF said in its latest holiday forecast that U.S. holiday sales in November and December are expected to climb between $1.01 trillion and $1.02 trillion, which would put the industry above the trillion-dollar mark for the first time. That projection gives the earlier $964.4 billion benchmark new context. It was not merely a record season. It was part of a climb that has continued even as shoppers have become more price-sensitive and more deliberate. Crossing that threshold, however, would not automatically mean consumers are carefree. Higher nominal spending can reflect inflation as much as stronger purchasing power. Retailers have increasingly relied on promotions to protect volume, while many shoppers have spread purchases over a longer calendar and leaned harder on financing tools. Those behaviors support top-line sales, but they also reveal a consumer who is still balancing celebration with caution. That is what makes the $964.4 billion figure so useful today. It captured a moment when the American shopper proved more resilient than many expected, and it helped define the current era of holiday retailing: one shaped by digital growth, strategic discounting and steady demand that has held up even under financial pressure. The number endures because it was not just a record. It was the benchmark that made the next leap in holiday spending seem possible.