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Online retail a priority for buying Christmas gifts, but some still dash into the servo

Online retail for Christmas gifts is becoming the norm for shoppers, with 65% planning to buy a gift via local websites this year, new research shows. A survey of more than 1000 shoppers conducted by financial services group Aussie found that 47.7% of shoppers plan to buy a gift from overseas retailers. However 4.4% confessed […]
Melinda Oliver
Melinda Oliver
GST

Online retail for Christmas gifts is becoming the norm for shoppers, with 65% planning to buy a gift via local websites this year, new research shows.

A survey of more than 1000 shoppers conducted by financial services group Aussie found that 47.7% of shoppers plan to buy a gift from overseas retailers.

However 4.4% confessed they stop at a service station on Christmas Day to buy a last-minute gift, while 24.3% do their shopping at a local shopping centre on Christmas Eve.

Aussie chief executive Ian Corfield said that local and online retailers are making a โ€œreal dentโ€ in Australianโ€™s gift spending habits.

One quarter of shoppers plan to spend between $250 to $499 on gifts, while almost 19% intend to spend between $1000 and $1999.

Just over 15% responded that they will spend between $750 to $999 on spoiling friends and family.

The remaining 5.7% intend to spend under $249 in total on gifts.

Cash looks set to be the number one method of payment for gifts, at 67.6%, followed by credit cards at 54.3% and debit cards at 48.8%.

PayPal and other online purchasing tools will get a solid workout, 32.4% of respondents intending to use them.

โ€œIt looks like Australians will be racking up many millions of dollars in credit card fees again this Christmas,โ€ Corfield said.

The survey also found that 70% of shoppers do their shopping at a steady pace leading up to Christmas, while 60% dedicated a full day to get it done before December 25.

Handmade gifts still got a look-in, with just over a 25% intending to give things they had created themselves. And 8.3% said they will re-gift last yearโ€™s presents.

The results come as Australian Christmas shoppers are forecast to spend $7.07 billion this week, up $490 million from last week, in the second-biggest shopping week of the year, according to the Australian National Retailers Association Christmas Retail Index.

This is part of a $42.1 billion expected spend on Christmas from November 14 until Christmas Eve.

ANRA chief executive officer Margy Osmond said the next two weeks will see the bulk of Christmas shopping occur.

โ€œWeโ€™ve reached the serious end of the shopping calendar and Australian shoppers are expected to spend almost $16 billion over the next fortnight in what will be the two biggest shopping weeks of the entire year,โ€ she said.

โ€œBricks-and-mortar stores will experience a sizeable increase in sales at the till, with spending expected to hit $5.5 billion โ€“ an increase of 32% since last week.

โ€œDomestic online retailers will have their biggest week of the year where sales will reach $1.55 billion โ€“ up 23% on last weekโ€™s figure.

โ€œOverseas online purchases will begin to peter off as the delivery deadline closes in and shoppers look for other alternatives to ensure theyโ€™ve crossed everyone off the Christmas shopping list.

Ormond said that shoppers in NSW will make the biggest contribution to sales, spending about $2.15 billion, while in Queensland they will spend $1.49 billion.

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