Field guide

Am I addicted to
online shopping?

Most impulse buying is a habit: annoying, expensive, fixable with friction. For some people it's something heavier — compulsive buying that runs on distress and leaves shame. The difference matters, because the fixes are different. Here's the honest checklist.

Eight signs it's more than a habit

  1. You shop to escape feelings — and the relief is the point, not the item.
  2. You hide purchases, delete confirmation emails, or intercept parcels before anyone sees.
  3. Unopened deliveries accumulate. The buying mattered; the owning doesn't.
  4. You've set rules — and broken them — more than a few times.
  5. Spending is causing real consequences: debt, missed payments, arguments.
  6. The aftermath is shame rather than mild regret, and the shame triggers more buying.
  7. You feel restless or irritable when you try not to shop.
  8. The time spent browsing is itself out of control — hours you'd hide if asked.

One or two, occasionally? That's most people, and friction tools genuinely help. Several, consistently, with distress attached? Take it seriously — compulsive buying is recognised, common, and treatable, and none of it means anything is wrong with you as a person.

Where to get real help (UK, free)

Where we fit (and where we don't)

really? adds friction and honesty at the checkout — useful scaffolding for a habit, and users tell us the mandatory excuse box catches the autopilot orders. But a sarcastic countdown is not treatment, and we'd rather lose an install than pretend otherwise. Habit: we've got you. Heavier: the links above, first.


More field guides: Emotional Spending · Money Dysmorphia · how to stop impulse buying online · all 26 guides