The Real Story Behind “Record” Holiday Spending: Inflation, Population, Confidence - and Now BNPL

Every Black Friday and Cyber Monday, the same headline shows up: “Record holiday spending!”

It sounds like a booming consumer. But the truth is more complicated - and more important to understand.

Here’s the full picture, in plain English.

Why “Record Spending” Happens Almost Every Year

There are two forces that push total dollars up automatically:

Prices are higher (inflation)

If a TV costs 10% more than last year, total spending will rise even if people buy fewer TVs.

There are more people (population growth)

More shoppers → more dollars spent.

Put simply:
Higher totals don’t always mean people bought more - it often just means everything cost more, and more people paid those prices.

The Adjustment That Reveals The Truth

To understand the real strength of consumer demand, you adjust the headline number three ways:

  1. Inflation-adjusted growth - real buying power

  2. Per-capita growth - what each person is actually spending

  3. Confidence-adjusted demand - how people feel about their finances

This year, consumer confidence has been falling for two straight quarters.

That alone tells you something:
If spending is up while confidence is down, people aren’t spending because they feel good - they’re spending because they feel pressured.

In 2025, a fourth adjustment became essential: BNPL

This holiday season, Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) wasn’t just used, it became a major factor in the record numbers.

BNPL surged:

  • Black Friday BNPL: $747.5M
    → 6.3% of all online spending

  • Cyber Monday BNPL: $1.03B
    → 7.3% of all online spending

  • Holiday-season BNPL: $20.2B
    → Up 11% from last year

BNPL users spend more:

  • Average Black Friday BNPL transaction: $598

  • Average non-BNPL transaction: $452

BNPL makes the dollar totals look bigger even if unit volumes don’t grow.

This is the key insight:
BNPL inflated the spending totals; not necessarily the demand.

People aren’t buying more because they feel strong.
They’re buying more because they can break the cost into payments.

When you put all four factors together…

  • Inflation

  • Population

  • Falling confidence

  • BNPL dependency
    A different story than the headlines describe

The “record” numbers are real, but the reason behind them matters more:

Consumers didn’t power 2025’s holiday spending — the cost structure and financing tools did.

This is not a boom.

It’s a stretch.

Why This Matters For Businesses

If you run a dealership, a retail operation, or any consumer-facing business, this distinction is crucial.

  • Don’t mistake high dollars for high confidence.

  • Don’t assume customers can sustain this spending level.

  • Don’t forecast off headline numbers inflated by BNPL.

  • Do build plans that assume stress spending, not strength spending.

The healthiest planning comes from understanding the “why,” not just the “what.”

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