The gap between rising costs and consumer behavior
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In many states, spending is still rising faster than inflation meaning people are actually buying more, not just paying higher prices.
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States like Massachusetts, California, and DC are leading the trend, with spending gaps as high as 5% despite modest price increases.
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The takeaway: higher costs arent slowing consumers down theyre just making everyday life more expensive while spending habits stay the same.
Youd expect higher prices to force people to cut back. But thats not really whats happening.
A recent report from SensaPay shows that in many parts of the country, consumers are still spending more, even after accounting for inflation. The interesting part is that people arent just paying more because things cost more. Theyre actually buying more.
Thats a key distinction. It means higher prices havent fully changed consumer behavior theyve just made everyday life more expensive.
The states where spending is still climbing
The data highlights a group of states where spending is outpacing price increases the most:
- Massachusetts: +5.3% spending gap (prices up just 0.8%)
- California: +4.8% spending gap (prices up 1.3%)
- Washington, DC: +4.7% spending gap (prices up 1.9%)
- Vermont: +3.9% spending gap (prices up 1.3%)
- Connecticut: +3.9% spending gap (prices up 1.9%)
- Maine: +3.7% spending gap (prices up 2.0%)
- Arizona: +3.6% spending gap (prices up 2.9%)
- New York: +3.6% spending gap (prices up 2.4%)
- Washington: +3.6% spending gap (prices up 2.3%)
- Florida: +3.5% spending gap (prices up 3.5%)
In general terms, people in these states arent just absorbing higher prices or finding cheaper alternatives, theyre actually increasing how much they consume.
What the data actually tells us
The key metric in the report is the spending gap, which is the difference between how much spending increased and how much prices increased.
For example: If spending rises 6% and prices rise 2%, that extra 4% reflects real growth in purchases.
Across these states, that gap is consistently positive. In other words, inflation isnt slowing spending, but rather, its just raising the cost of keeping up.
Why people keep spending anyway
On the surface, it doesnt make sense. When prices go up, you would think that spending would go down. But behavior doesnt work that cleanly.
1. Most spending isnt flexible
A big chunk of your budget is already locked in:
- Rent or mortgage
- Insurance
- Car payments
- Subscriptions
These arent things people cut overnight. So even if prices rise, total spending stays high because the biggest expenses dont move easily.
2. People adjust slower than prices do
Inflation shows up gradually with slightly higher groceries, gas, and services. Individually, these increases dont feel urgent, but together they quietly raise your monthly costs.
3. Small increases add up fast
An extra $10 here or $15 there doesnt seem like much. But over time, it turns into hundreds of dollars a year without a noticeable lifestyle change.
4. Convenience spending fills the gap
Instead of cutting back, many people lean into convenience:
- Food delivery
- Rideshare
- Time-saving services
These feel justified, but in actuality, they raise overall spending in ways that are easy to overlook.
5. Lifestyle expectations dont reset quickly
Once youre used to a certain way of living, its hard to scale back. So instead of changing behavior, people often adjust to higher prices.
How to stay ahead of the trend
You dont need to overhaul your life completely, but you do need to be intentional.
1. Find your quiet increases
Look for areas that crept up without you noticing. Things like:
- Food delivery
- Subscriptions
- Everyday convenience spending
2. Pressure-test your budget
Ask yourself, if costs went up another 510%, would you be okay?
If not, then thats where to adjust first. A good place to start is with store-brands at the grocery store, some of which are actually made by the popular name-brand.
3. Redirect instead of cutting everything
Shift some spending toward things that help you financially:
- Paying down high-interest debt
- Building a small emergency fund
- Locking in predictable costs
Posted: 2026-04-17 16:00:36

















