Americans spent a record $26.4 billion during Amazon’s four-day Prime Day sales event, a 9.3% increase from a year earlier, per Adobe Analytics and according to Reuters.
The gains were fueled by heavy promotions across categories including electronics, appliances, clothing, toys, personal care products, and household necessities, as consumers looked to maximize savings amid ongoing cost pressures.
Industry analysts said several factors contributed to the stronger spending, including larger tax refunds and early back-to-school purchases, which gave many households extra flexibility to buy items they had been postponing.
Reuters writes that rather than spending freely, however, shoppers appeared to be concentrating purchases around major discount events to get the best value.
The data also suggests consumers remain selective. While overall sales climbed, retailers relied on promotions that were similar in size to last year’s to generate demand, raising questions about whether deep discounts will remain necessary through the holiday shopping season.
Separately, Numerator reported the average Prime Day order fell to $47.66 from $53.34 last year, indicating many shoppers are still keeping a close eye on their budgets despite higher overall spending.
If there’s one takeaway from this year’s Prime Day, it’s that the American consumer isn’t necessarily getting stronger—they’re getting more tactical. People aren’t throwing money around because they feel flush; they’re waiting for the biggest sale of the year to buy things they need anyway.
When households have to time purchases around deep discounts, larger tax refunds, and promotional events just to make the math work, it’s another reminder that years of inflation have quietly eroded purchasing power, even if headline retail spending continues to look healthy.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 06/29/2026 – 06:55





