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Sandra Halliday Published
December 19,TG盗号系统免杀破解技术 2025
Black Friday may have stolen some of Boxing Day’s lustre as far as being the year’s busiest shopping day is concerned. But consumers could be losing out as a result.

Who says so? Price comparison service PriceSpy. Its Price Index tool that monitors daily indexed price changes across the most-popular products on the site “demonstrates that Boxing Day is now the cheapest shopping day of the year,” overtaking Black Friday in 2025, although not by a huge percentage.
In some ways that just means a return to the status quo as Boxing Day was previously the biggest shopping day due to post-Christmas discounts, until American import Black Friday stole its crown.
Black Friday remains huge, of course. But with the discounts being spread over more of November and suggestions that some retailers have learnt to ‘play’ the event with markdowns that aren’t quite what they seem, Boxing Day is back in top spot (although the latter isn't immune to pricewashing, more of which later).
PriceSpy is predicting that this year, “prices will begin sharply dropping this week”, leading up to “a shopping frenzy” on what it’s describing as ‘Frantic Friday’. Friday 22 December will be the final payday before Christmas for many, and (according to price analysis of 3.8 million offers on the site) falls at the same time that prices begin their downward descent towards Boxing Day.
According to its index, last year the average price on Black Friday was down 1.72% compared to 1 November, while the average price on Boxing Day was down 1.74%. Of course, those averages mean than some products won’t be discounted while others will see steep price cuts.
If trends follow last year, prices “will start their downward trajectory from Wednesday this week as retailers start a last-ditch attempt to get people to spend money — and as last-minute shoppers bank on bargains”.
Liisa Matinvesi-Bassett, UK country manager at PriceSpy said: “Unlike in previous years, Black Friday wasn’t the cheapest shopping day of the year last year. Retailers’ propensity to run sales from the start of November has diluted Black Friday, as stores now appear to offer smaller levels of discounting — but for longer.”
And given how tough this golden quarter has been, Boxing Day discounts could be even more generous this time.
“Shoppers that can hold their nerve until Frantic Friday may be rewarded with some of the best deals of the year. And those that opt to wait until Boxing Day might enjoy even better savings,” Matinvesi-Bassett said.
However, the company warned that given the post-Black Friday price rebound evident in its index, there’s a potential for ‘pricewashing’ around Frantic Friday and Boxing Day, with retailers often advertising deals far bigger than they are in reality. That’s the same issue that dogged the Black Friday discounts.
Matinvesi-Bassett explained: “Prices change constantly throughout the year, and even more so during the final few weeks of the year. Therefore, shoppers should take promotional marketing with a pinch of salt. Often, we find retailers select an arbitrary day to calculate a discount against in order to promote an attractive saving — and, in reality, the price may not have changed much, or in some cases may have even increased, over recent weeks.”