The holiday shopping spree kicked off early this year as large retailers like Wal-Mart and Target started offering online deals many weeks before Thanksgiving weekend. For brick-and-mortar shoppers, some stores will even extend their Black Friday hours into Thanksgiving Day. That’s both good news and bad news for many Americans, as attitudes about holiday shopping can be quite polarizing.

Asked if holiday shopping was something they look forward to or dread, 42% of Americans say they look forward to it, while 50% of Americans say they dread it, according to a CBS News poll earlier this month. And 61% say they won’t shop at all over Thanksgiving weekend, compared with 36% who say they will. Just 2% of Americans say they will shop on Thanksgiving Day itself — the majority of Americans (76%) believe stores should be closed then.

christmasgifts1126While 37% of Americans plan to spend less on gifts this year, 10% plan on spending more. This year’s average Christmas shopper plans on spending $704, down from the $770 they planned to spend around this time last year, according to Gallup. Looking back to 1999, the largest amount that Americans planned to spend on Christmas gifts was $866 in 2007, before the nation was hit with the financial crisis. The smallest amount was $616 during the 2008 recession, a year later.

Holiday shopping is also becoming more digital. Despite media coverage of people waiting up all night to score big Black Friday discounts, only 13% of consumers plan to shop in physical stores this Black Friday, according to Nielsen, down from 17% in 2012. Meanwhile, 46% of consumers say they will shop online on Cyber Monday – using computers (88%), tablets (37%) and cell phones (27%), an increase compared with 30% in 2012.

George Gao  is a former associate digital producer at Pew Research Center.