U.S. online shoppers spent $26.4 billion from June 23 through June 26 during Amazon.com Inc.'s Prime Day event, Adobe Analytics data showed, surpassing the firm's pre-event forecast of $26.3 billion.
"The headline number looks strong, but the composition tells a more cautious story — shoppers are buying more frequently in smaller increments rather than loading up carts," said Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights.
First-day spending reached $8.3 billion, up 5.3% from the 2025 edition and marking the single biggest e-commerce day of 2026 so far, according to Adobe. Yet Numerator data showed average order size on day two fell 14% year-over-year to $48.89, while average household spend dropped 17% to $104.86. The average price per item declined roughly 9% to $23.07, with 69% of purchases ringing up under $20.
The divergence between aggregate spending and per-transaction metrics suggests consumers are willing to shop but remain price-sensitive amid persistent inflation and elevated interest rates. That dynamic carries implications for third-quarter retail earnings and the broader consumer discretionary sector, which accounts for roughly 10% of S&P 500 market capitalization.
Deal Fatigue Sets In
Only 41% of Prime Day shoppers said the event was their main reason for shopping, down sharply from 52% at the same point in 2025, Numerator found. Nearly half of households placed two or more separate orders, a slight decline from 51% a year earlier. The data points to waning urgency around Amazon's annual promotion, now in its second year as a four-day event held in June.
The typical Prime Day shopper remained a high-income suburban female aged 45 to 64, consistent with prior years. About 94% knew the event was happening before shopping, and 85% were Amazon Prime members. Yet deal comparison was widespread — 49% of shoppers also participated in Walmart Deals, while 33% shopped Target Circle Deal Days, a sign of an increasingly competitive promotional calendar.
What $26.4 Billion Says About the Consumer
The $26.4 billion total exceeded Adobe's estimate by $100 million, but the trajectory of per-order spending raises questions about consumer health. Average household expenditure on day two fell for the second consecutive year, following a similar decline on day one. The trend mirrors broader retail data showing Americans are still spending but trading down to cheaper alternatives and waiting for discounts before making purchases.
Top-selling categories included apparel and shoes, household essentials, and health and wellness. The most popular individual items — Premier protein shakes, Liquid I.V. hydration packets, and Hefty Ultra Strong trash bags — skewed toward everyday consumables rather than big-ticket electronics, a shift from earlier Prime Day events dominated by Amazon devices and televisions.
Nearly two-thirds of shoppers reported being highly satisfied with the deals available, and 48% said they purchased something they had been waiting to buy until it went on sale. That suggests pent-up demand remains, but only when prices meet expectations.
The spending data arrives as consumer sentiment hit a record low in May, according to the University of Michigan survey, with inflation expectations rising. The Federal Reserve's next policy decision on July 30 will offer the clearest signal on whether rate cuts are on the horizon — a factor that could determine whether consumer spending momentum holds through the back-to-school and holiday seasons.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.