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Daily Record
Daily Record
Lifestyle
Vicky Shaw & Linda Howard

Online grocery spending doubles in December as families stayed home for Christmas

A new report has found that online grocery shopping soared in December while fuel spending declined, as many people cancelled their festive plans and stayed at home.

The research by Barclaycard reveals that consumer spending fell by 2.3 per cent year-on-year in December, but online grocery spending surged by 88 per cent as households stocked up on Christmas food and festive essentials.

Supermarket spending grew by 14.7 per cent in total annually, however fuel spending fell by 20.7 per cent annually as many families' seasonal plans to visit loved ones were scrapped.

While in-store retail spending fell by 8.3 per cent annually in December, online retail sales increased by 52.2 per cent - accounting for nearly half (46.8%) of all retail spending in December, Barclaycard said.

Specialist retailers, including toy shops, jewellers and gift shops recorded spending growth of 61.9 per cent online.

Spending on specialist food and drink retailers such as butchers' and bakeries increased by 43.7 per cent.

Consumer research from Barclaycard found that 54 per cent of people agree they will do what they can to support local shops during 2021 - spending in department stores was down by 15.2 per cent year-on-year.

The hospitality sector was also hit hard, with steep spending declines at bars and pubs (down by 71.4% annually) and restaurants (a 65.4% decline).

Raheel Ahmed, head of consumer products, said changing coronavirus restrictions continue to have an impact on spending habits - "which was particularly acute across the high street and hospitality sectors in December, with restaurants, pubs and bars hardest hit during a low-key festive season in the majority of the UK".

He continued: "As a result of further restrictions, online grocery spend surged and fuel declined as the majority cancelled their plans and stayed home for the holidays.

"Additionally, many still continued to support their local shops where possible, spending more time in their local community.

"Small businesses have continued to remain agile to these changing consumer habits - with many going online for the first time. From dog walking services to subscriptions of weekly meal kits, small businesses are exploring new ways to reach their customer base."

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