🛒 The Retail Therapy Accountability Report
The Real Cost of “Treating Yourself”
Self-care is not a budget category. It is an excuse with aromatherapy. And it is costing the average American $3,381 per year — which is, ironically, making the stress worse.
There is a cultural phenomenon that has been growing for approximately a decade, accelerated significantly by social media, pandemic spending psychology, and the mainstreaming of wellness culture. It has a charming name and a very expensive habit attached to it.
It is called treating yourself. Or, in its Gen Z form, the “little treat.” Or, in its industry form, “self-care spending.” Or, in the honest form that this article will use: emotional spending that has been given better branding.
The average American spends $282 per month on impulse purchases — totalling $3,381 per year — per Capital One Shopping’s 2024 research. Americans also spend an average of $199 per month on self-care. These two categories overlap considerably, and together they represent a meaningful slice of the income that the same people report not having enough of for savings, debt repayment, or financial security.
This is not an argument against joy. It is an argument against calling it something it isn’t, and then being surprised when the bank account reflects the reality rather than the rebranding.
average annual impulse purchase spend in 2024 per U.S. consumer ($282/month), per Capital One Shopping research
of Americans have made impulse purchases; 54% have spent $100+ on a single impulse buy — Capital One Shopping November 2025
of Americans admit to spending money they didn’t have as a way to cope with emotions — Bankrate 2026 survey
average monthly self-care spend per American — separate from impulse buys, per self-care statistics report, February 2026
What “Treating Yourself” Actually Costs: The Annual Audit
Let’s do the math that the “you deserve it” culture never does. Most treat spending happens in small, discrete amounts that feel inconsequential in isolation. The aggregate is another matter.
🧮 The Annual “Treat Yourself” Audit (U.S. Average, 2025)
$282 / month
$199 / month
$90 / month
$200 / year wasted
~$5,772 / year
~$236,000
* These are averages, not prescriptions. Some of this spending is considered, intentional, and budgeted for. Much of it is not. The exercise is to see the aggregate, not to induce guilt about individual purchases.
The $5,772 annual figure is not the problem in isolation. Spending money on things that bring genuine enjoyment is not a character failing. The problem is the gap between what people believe they spend on treats and what they actually spend — and between what those treats are meant to solve and whether they solve it.
About 74% of Americans have an overspending problem, while more than half admit to spending recklessly, per Clever Real Estate’s 2024 survey. Almost half of respondents have cried over their spending habits. The treats are not producing the contentment they were purchased to produce.
Fig. 1 — The treat-yourself spending breakdown. Clothing leads, food follows, beauty and skincare occupy the self-care overlap zone. Every category individually feels small. Summed monthly, they describe a different budget.
The Dopamine Loop: Why Treating Yourself Keeps Not Working
Here is the genuinely interesting part. The reason treating yourself produces diminishing returns is not a moral issue. It is a neurological one. And understanding it is significantly more useful than judging it.
The brain’s dopamine system is designed to motivate pursuit of rewards — not to sustain satisfaction once rewards are obtained. Dopamine peaks in anticipation of a reward. The moment of receiving the reward — the package arriving, the item in your hands — produces a smaller dopamine response than the anticipation did. Then the system resets.
Retailers understand this deeply. One-click checkout, autofill payment fields, “customers also bought,” countdown timers, and flash sale notifications all exist to shorten the time between impulse and purchase — because the longer the deliberation gap, the more likely the dopamine peak will fade before the purchase is made.
Stress / Boredom
Emotional depletion triggers the urge to change the feeling
Browse / Discover
Dopamine begins rising in anticipation — this is the peak
Purchase
Brief satisfaction. Smaller dopamine hit than anticipation
Hedonic Adaptation
The treat becomes normal. Original stress unchanged.
Stress Returns
Plus financial anxiety from the purchase. Loop restarts.
— Dr. David Myers, social psychologist, Hope College, on what research shows about spending and happiness
The research on hedonic adaptation is consistent and somewhat depressing: humans are remarkably efficient at adjusting to new baselines. The treat that felt special becomes normal with surprisingly little time. The next treat needs to be slightly larger to produce the same effect. This is not a character flaw. It is how adaptation works. And it is the underlying mechanism of treat culture’s escalating costs.
The Five Emotional Triggers (And What They Are Actually Asking For)
Treating yourself is typically a response to one of five emotional states. Each one uses spending as its language. Each one has a response that actually addresses the underlying state — and a more expensive response that addresses it temporarily.
| The Trigger | What You Buy | What You Actually Need | Cost Differential |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stress / overwhelm | Skincare, clothing, food delivery | Rest, boundaries, addressing the stressor | $80 vs. free |
| Boredom | Online shopping (34% of impulse buyers) | Stimulation: walk, call, activity, book | $50 vs. free |
| Celebration / reward | Expensive dinner, clothing, experience | Recognition: this can be spending! When budgeted. | Budgeted: fine |
| Social comparison | Whatever the influencer has | Security that doesn’t require external validation | Ongoing; expensive |
| Fear of missing out | The sale, the event, the thing everyone has | Confidence in your own priorities | $100–$500 per episode |
The research from the Journal of Consumer Research found that 62% of people use retail therapy to feel better. And it does work — briefly. The problem is that the financial consequence of the therapy creates its own stress, which becomes its own trigger, which creates the next round of retail therapy. This is the loop that makes treating yourself progressively less satisfying and more expensive over time.
Fig. 2 — The comparison that wellness marketing does not want you to make. Evidence-based self-care is slower, cheaper, and compounds. Retail therapy is faster, more expensive, and requires escalation. Both feel like self-care. Only one reliably is.
The Treat Taxonomy: Which Ones Are Actually Worth It
Not all treats are the same. The research on spending and wellbeing is surprisingly nuanced. Dr. David Myers is right that multiple small experiences produce better wellbeing than fewer large ones. The issue is not treating yourself — it is whether the treat is intentional, proportionate, and actually addressing the state it’s meant to address.
The Daily Small Treat
~$4–$8 per occasion
The coffee, the pastry, the oat milk latte that became a culture war. Research supports small, regular pleasures. The issue is only when they’re untracked at $8 daily = $2,920/year.
The Self-Care Purchase
$30–$200 per item
Skincare, wellness products, supplements. Range from genuinely useful to expensive placebo. The wellness industry is a $4.5T global market. Not all of it is necessary.
The Stress-Shopping Haul
$80–$300 per episode
Triggered by a bad day. Often regretted within 48 hours. 34% of impulse purchases are made out of boredom — this is the highest-regret category.
The FOMO Purchase
$50–$500 per event
The concert, the product launch, the thing everyone has. Two-thirds of consumers have impulse-bought because of fear of missing out. The urgency is manufactured. The purchase is real.
The Planned Experience
Budgeted amount
The trip, the dinner, the event that was chosen deliberately and saved for. This is what treating yourself is supposed to look like. This one is fine. This is not the problem being described.
The Subscription You Forgot
$15–$50 per month, forever
Americans spend $200/year on subscriptions they don’t use. This is treating a past version of yourself at the expense of the current one. Check your statements monthly.
The Part the Wellness Industry Doesn’t Want You to Read
The wellness industry has achieved something genuinely impressive: it has successfully rebranded consumer purchases as self-care. A face mask is self-care. A bath bomb is self-care. A luxury candle is self-care. A new gym bag to motivate you to go to the gym you already pay for is self-care.
This rebranding matters because it changes the emotional valence of the purchase. A face mask feels virtuous in a way that “an impulse buy from Sephora” does not. The industry has given discretionary spending a health halo, which makes it easier to rationalise and harder to audit.
44% of Americans believe self-care is only possible for people with enough money, per 2026 self-care statistics research. This is simultaneously an indictment of how self-care has been positioned — as a product category rather than a practice — and an accurate description of how the market sells it.
The evidence-based self-care practices that most reliably improve wellbeing are: adequate sleep, regular movement, time in nature, connection with other people, and addressing the actual sources of stress. Spending 20 minutes in nature significantly lowers cortisol levels. Daily exercise can reduce the risk of depression by 26%. Meditation can reduce anxiety symptoms in 60% of individuals. All free. None of them in a beautifully designed bottle.
Fig. 3 — The wellbeing impact comparison. The free column consistently outperforms the purchased column on lasting effect. The purchased column has a better marketing budget.
How to Treat Yourself Without Treating Your Budget as a Suggestion
The goal is not to eliminate treats. The goal is to make them intentional, proportionate, and honest about what they are doing for you.
- Budget for it explicitly. Include a “fun money” or “treat” line in your monthly budget. Spend freely within it. The permission is real. The limit is real. Inside the line: no guilt. Outside the line: the budget wins.
- Apply the 24-hour rule to anything over $30. Most impulse urges peak and fade within ten minutes if you don’t act on them. A 24-hour pause on non-essential purchases over $30 eliminates most impulse spending without requiring willpower — just time.
- Name the emotion before you open the app. “I’m stressed and want to buy something” is data. It tells you that the solution you need is stress-related, not purchase-related. Pause for five minutes and identify whether a purchase will actually address the underlying state.
- Audit your subscriptions quarterly. Four times a year, list every recurring charge. Cancel anything you haven’t actively used in the last month. The average American wastes $200/year on unused subscriptions — the least satisfying treats in the category.
- Distinguish celebrating from soothing. Spending to celebrate something specific, planned, and budgeted for is fine and good. Spending to soothe a feeling that would be better addressed differently is the pattern to interrupt. One is a reward. One is retail therapy.
- Build free self-care practices before spending on purchased ones. Sleep, movement, time outside, connection with people you like — these are the evidence-based high-impact interventions. Investing in purchased self-care on top of these is reasonable. Using purchased self-care as a substitute for them is expensive and less effective.
“Treating yourself” is not the enemy. The enemy is the gap between what you believe the treat will do for you and what it actually does, repeated at $282 per month while the underlying conditions that generated the need for a treat remain unchanged. Treats are fine. Treats are good. Treats that are honest about being treats, budgeted for, and chosen intentionally rather than reactively — these are excellent. The problem is the pattern, not the pastry.
Frequently Asked Questions About Treating Yourself
How much does treating yourself actually cost per year?
The average American spends $282 per month on impulse purchases in 2024, totalling approximately $3,381 per year, per Capital One Shopping research. Americans also spend an average of $199 per month specifically on self-care products. Combined, these categories represent roughly $5,000+ per year for the average consumer — often the same income they report having insufficient amounts of for savings, debt repayment, or financial security. The correlation is not coincidental.
What is the psychology behind treating yourself?
Treating yourself activates the brain’s dopamine reward system. The anticipation of a purchase releases dopamine — often more dopamine than the purchase itself ultimately provides. Retailers exploit this through one-click checkout, flash sales, and countdown timers to shorten the deliberation window between impulse and action. Research shows 62% of people use retail therapy to feel better, 61% report happiness after a spontaneous purchase, and 67% believe impulse shopping can turn around a bad day. The emotional mechanism is real. The financial consequence is also real.
Is treating yourself always bad financially?
No. Small, intentional treats on a planned basis are financially manageable and psychologically beneficial. Dr. David Myers notes money is often better spent on multiple small experiences. The problem is not the treat; it is the pattern — when treating yourself becomes the default response to stress, boredom, reward, or celebration, disconnected from budget awareness. The distinction is intentionality: a planned $30 treat inside a budget is different from a $300 reactive purchase because Tuesday felt terrible.
What triggers emotional spending?
Research identifies five primary triggers: stress or overwhelm (the most common), boredom, celebration or reward, social comparison, and fear of missing out. 49% of Americans admit to spending money they didn’t have as a way to cope with emotions. 34% of impulse shoppers buy out of boredom specifically. The common thread is that spending is being used as an emotional regulation tool — which works briefly, before the financial consequence creates its own stress, which becomes the next trigger.
What is the difference between self-care and treating yourself?
Evidence-based self-care addresses the actual source of depletion: sleep, boundaries, rest, movement, connection, and directly addressing stressors. Treating yourself addresses the feeling of depletion with a purchase that provides temporary dopamine relief without changing the underlying conditions. Both have value in different measures. Only one of them makes a lasting difference to the wellbeing state being addressed. The wellness industry has successfully rebranded consumer purchases as self-care — which is profitable and occasionally genuinely useful, but these categories are not equivalent.
How do I treat myself without financial damage?
Budget for it explicitly — a “fun money” line in your monthly spending that you can deploy without guilt. Apply the 24-hour rule to purchases over $30 (most impulse urges fade within ten minutes if not acted on). Identify your emotional triggers and build non-financial first responses to them. Audit subscriptions quarterly and cancel unused ones. Distinguish celebrating (planned, specific, budgeted) from soothing (reactive, emotionally driven, often regretted). The treat is not the enemy. The untracked, reactive, emotionally-driven pattern of treating yourself is the expensive one.
More Financial Clarity That Doesn’t Cost $50 to Access
Treats That Are Actually Treats (And Within Budget)
If you are going to treat yourself — and you should — here are four options that tend to produce sustained wellbeing rather than twenty-minute dopamine peaks followed by financial regret.
A Book You’ve Been Putting Off
A book is a treat that lasts 8–15 hours and produces sustained cognitive engagement. The cost-per-hour is among the lowest of any pleasure purchase. Also: it is an experience, not a product.
A Quality Tea or Coffee Setup
The daily small treat that research actually endorses. Invest once in quality equipment; the per-cup cost drops to a genuinely manageable level. Also: you own it. It is not a subscription.
A Guided Meditation or Sleep Aid
One of the few self-care purchases with direct research support. Sleep quality and stress reduction are where the evidence-based self-care literature consistently points. This is the category worth spending on.
A Budget Planner to Track the Treats
The most financially useful self-care purchase available. Knowing exactly where your money goes is less glamorous than a face mask and more effective at reducing the financial anxiety that makes face masks feel necessary.
