After several years of strong holiday growth, 2025 is shaping up to be a year of recalibration. According to PwC’s latest consumer survey, overall holiday spending is expected to decline by 5%, marking the first drop since 2020. The biggest driver of this shift: Gen Z, whose planned spending is down nearly 25% year over year.
But what’s happening here goes beyond inflation or cost-of-living pressures. The data signals a broader transformation in how every generation — from Gen Z to Boomers — defines value, makes purchase decisions, and interacts with brands.
Retailers heading into the 2025 holiday season are confronting a rare convergence of factors: economic fatigue, cautious optimism, and changing consumer priorities that span every generation.
While inflation is stabilizing, shoppers are feeling its residual impact on daily expenses like housing and groceries. Eighty-four percent of U.S. consumers say they plan to spend less in the next six months, reflecting a national mood of financial self-preservation.
This doesn’t necessarily mean consumers aren’t spending. It means they’re spending more deliberately. Across sectors, we’re seeing:
This shift represents more than a temporary slowdown. It’s a correction. A return to intentional consumption after years of pandemic-era splurging and stimulus-fueled demand.
Gen Z’s spending pullback isn’t about pessimism; it’s about principle. This generation, now a major force in the economy, is reshaping consumer culture through a mix of pragmatism and personal expression.
For Gen Z, “value” is multidimensional. It’s not just about price tags, but about alignment with identity and purpose. Their shopping behaviors show that they:
This generation’s cautious spending may feel like a pullback, but it’s more accurately a reshuffling of priorities. They’re still participating in retail; just on their own terms. The “splurge” moments will still come, but they’ll be tied to experiences, social moments, and brands that earn their loyalty through transparency and creativity.
For brands navigating this new consumer mindset, personalization is key. Optimizing segmentation strategies can help tailor messaging and retention efforts for these more deliberate shoppers.
While Gen Z headlines the conversation, other generations are also adjusting their approach to holiday spending:
The common thread? Every generation is redefining what “worth it” means.
Where past holidays were driven by novelty and abundance, 2025 may be remembered as the year consumers collectively paused to realign spending with meaning.
The 2025 holiday season won’t reward the loudest brands; it will reward the most perceptive ones. Success this year depends less on who discounts deepest, and more on who truly understands the shifting psychology of value.
Several themes are coming into focus:
Holiday 2025 isn’t a downturn, rather it’s a moment of maturity. A collective recalibration where consumers are choosing meaning over motion. For retailers, this is both a challenge and an invitation: to listen more closely, to connect more thoughtfully, and to see value not as a price point, but as a mirror of what people truly care about.
As the noise of endless promotion fades, a quieter kind of growth is taking shape, one fueled by awareness, intentionality, and trust. The brands that understand why people spend won’t just keep them coming back; they’ll become part of how those consumers define value itself.
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