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Consumers make pour decisions.

Some 17% of Americans are guilty of shopping while under the influence, spending an average of $309 each, according to the Finder’s Drunk Shopping Survey of 2,179 online respondents.

That equates to $14 billion over the last 12 months.

But that tab is significantly less compared to Finder’s 2021 survey, which determined Americans collectively spent $21.6 billion on drunk purchases, half as much as the $44.9 billion in 2020, when the world stayed inside because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The new Finder’s poll, conducted in January and February, found that men (26%) are more likely than women (10%) to make a drunk purchase. The top category for men to shop while intoxicated is food (47%), while women (50%) opt for shoes, clothes, or accessories.


  Some 2,179 online respondents shared their shopping habits and alcohol consumption. Getty Images Some 2,179 online respondents shared their shopping habits and alcohol consumption. Getty Images

Other top items for men are: shoes, clothes, or accessories (46%), gambling (43%), and cigarettes (42%). Major female purchases include food (15%), alcohol (8%), cigarettes (5%), and pets, music, and gambling (4% each).

Motor vehicles drive the most expensive category with an average spend of $2,038.

Millennials (33%) are the generation most likely to hit “add to cart” when they’re drinking compared to Gen Z (28%), Gen X (8%), and Baby Boomers (2%).


  Men are more likely to gamble compared to women while they’re intoxicated. Getty Images/EyeEm Men are more likely to gamble compared to women while they’re intoxicated. Getty Images/EyeEm

Food was the top choice for boomers at 45%, with alcohol the most popular option for Gen X at 45%. Shoes, clothes or accessories were the most commonly bought items by both millennials (52%) and Gen Z (44%).

People on the West Coast (20%) are most likely to drunk shop while those in the Midwest (15%) are the least likely.

The study found under-the-influence shopping habits differ by salary.

People earning more than $100,000 a year (26%) are almost twice as likely to drunk shop as those who earn under $100,000 (15%).

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