EcommerceIndustry ContextFriday, May 29, 20264 min read

Rising gas prices may push more household spending toward Amazon

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Rising gas prices may push more household spending toward Amazon
Executive Summary

Higher gas prices could end up benefiting Amazon’s e-commerce business as consumers look for ways to avoid driving to stores and focus more of their spending on household essentials.

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The Amazon Effect // May 29, 2026 Rising gas prices may push more household spending toward Amazon By Allison Smith Ivy Liu Higher gas prices could end up benefiting Amazon’s e-commerce business as consumers look for ways to avoid driving to stores and focus more of their spending on household essentials.

Gas prices surpassed $4 a gallon for the first time since 2022 earlier this year, driven by disruptions to oil supply amid the U. S. -Iran war. As of Thursday, the national average for regular gas stands at $4. 43, well above the $3. 16 average a year ago, according to the American Automobile Association.

The spike has squeezed household budgets and changed how people shop. Consumers are pulling back on discretionary spending: Foot traffic data from Placer. ai shows visits to discretionary retailers declined year over year for the fourth consecutive week as of the week of May 11, while visits to non-discretionary retailers rose for the fourth straight week.

Shoppers are gravitating toward warehouse clubs, superstores and off-price chains instead. That sets up a potentially favorable moment for Amazon. The company has made same-day and ultrafast delivery a central priority in recent years, and it has leaned heavily into grocery as a growth category. Analysts say those investments could now pay off.

The e-commerce giant has spent the last several years building out faster delivery options for groceries and everyday items. Amazon’s recent push into one-hour, three-hour and even 30-minute delivery positions the company to capture more demand from consumers who want convenience without additional trips by car.

“E-commerce can benefit from higher gas prices as consumers look to cut back on the driving they do,” said Sky Canaves, principal analyst at eMarketer. “Consumers are being strategic with their spending across the board, and that filters down to how many trips they make and whether they can consolidate more of their outings and gas usage,” she said.

Amazon has increasingly marketed Prime as a tool for handling routine household purchases, groceries and pantry staples. In March, Amazon rolled out one-hour and three-hour delivery in parts of the U. S. for more than 90,000 products, including pantry items, cleaning supplies and over-the-counter medications.

Then in May, Amazon expanded its “Amazon Now” service, which promises delivery in 30 minutes or less in dozens of U. S. cities. The service focuses heavily on groceries and household essentials such as detergent and toothpaste. CEO Andy Jassy has argued that faster delivery leads shoppers to return to Amazon more often.

In April, during the company’s most recent earnings call, Jassy said c ustomers shopping same-day perishables build larger baskets, adding nearly three times as many items to their order and spending over 80% more than customers who don’t. Amazon’s grocery push may be particularly well-timed.

Canaves said Amazon is in a strong position as a first-party retailer to absorb cost pressures and price competitively on groceries, even at the expense of short-term margins, in order to win over more of that spending. Indeed, other grocers, like Walmart, have warned that higher fuel costs could lead to higher price tags on the shelf.

Recent consumer survey data suggests Americans remain highly price-conscious even as many still plan to spend this summer. Optimove Research found that 52% of U. S. consumers expect to spend more this summer than they did a year ago, while only 17% expect to spend less.

Discounts remain a major factor in purchasing decisions, with many shoppers saying promotions motivate them to buy items earlier than planned. Another survey from Omnisend found that nearly one-third of consumers planned to do more shopping online in order to reduce driving as gas prices climbed.

The study also found online spending rose sharply in March as consumers tried to avoid additional trips. Similarly, a survey of 2,500 Americans released earlier this month by Ipsos, the Washington Post and ABC News found that 44% of respondents are cutting back on the amount they drive.

Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData, said Amazon is benefiting from consumers increasingly viewing online shopping as a way to consolidate routine purchases and avoid extra trips to stores. “For people that order household goods online already, it isn’t a huge leap to start adding other things from the perishable market,” he said.

“People naturally see it as a kind of extended grocery shop.” Amazon also benefits from the types of products shoppers increasingly purchase during uncertain economic periods. Numerator data from Prime Day 2025 showed that many consumers used the event to stock up on essentials rather than splurge on luxury goods.

The top-selling items included Premier Protein Shakes, Dawn Platinum Powerwash and Liquid I. V. packets, while household essentials ranked among the m

Original Source

This briefing is based on reporting from Modern Retail. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

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