Scottish Daily Mail

£7.5BILLION BLACK FRIDAY

Beleaguere­d shops set for sales boost ... but some offers are best avoided

- By Sean Poulter Consumer Affairs Editor

IN A Black Friday frenzy, shoppers are predicted to spend £2 billion more than last year this weekend.

But experts warn that some bargains may not be quite as attractive as they appear.

For the first time, Britons will spend more online this Christmas than in the high street thanks to the lockdown of non-essential stores.

Many internet retailers, including Amazon and eBay, have been running Black Friday deals for weeks.

However, a dramatic surge is expected today through the weekend to Cyber Monday.

A study by the Centre for Retail Research estimates spending at online stores over the three days will hit £5.75 billion – up by 53 per cent on the £3.77 billion for the Black Friday weekend last year.

Fleets of delivery drivers will be needed to meet the demand, leading to fears that the courier system will not be able to cope, threatenin­g delays and disappoint­ment.

Many supermarke­t delivery slots for the week before Christmas are already booked and there is a shortage of qualified drivers to deal with

‘You could end up with a dud’

the tsunami of online orders. The Shopping for Christmas study predicts online spending will peak on Black Friday itself when £1.34 million will be spent every minute.

Because much of the high street is closed, the report – commission­ed by Vouchercod­es.co.uk – predicts that spending in bricks-and-mortar shops over the weekend will be down by 63.7 per cent on last year, from £4.79 billion to £1.74 billion.

The figures suggest the total spent this weekend online and on the high street could be £7.5 billion.

Black Friday, a US custom in which shops slash prices to lure Christmas shoppers, falls the day after Thanksgivi­ng, which is celebrated on the last Thursday of November.

However, experts warn that many Black Friday deals in the UK are not what they seem.

Research by Which? reveals that 85 per cent of products promoted as Black Friday deals last year had been on sale at the same price or cheaper in the weeks before.

The consumer group said shoppers should also look out for duds that come at a tempting price but still aren’t worth the money.

Which? identified a range of bargain goods, from toasters to TVs and car seats, that are of such poor quality it deems them ‘Don’t Buy’ products – some of them sold by the likes of Amazon, AO.com, Currys PC World and John Lewis.

It said: ‘Dud deals include a stairgate that failed a key safety test, a tepid toaster and a vacuum cleaner that fails to do the dirty work.’

For example, the Hi sense 65A7100FTU­K LED TV, on sale at £499 at Currys PC World, had the worst picture quality Which? reviewers had seen on a 65in TV for years.

Natalie Hitchins, of Which?, said: ‘Don’t dive in when you spot a tempting deal or you could end up with a dud. Save money and time by steering clear of these Don’t Buy products. To nab a quality product that will last the test of time, look beyond the special offer and check independen­t, thorough test results.’

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