56% of customers plan to celebrate Valentine’s Day this year (Istock)
Yeardo year for Valentine’s Day, lovers around the world attract all stops for their loved ones.
From traditional flowers or chocolate to the most expensive gifts such as diamonds, the holiday is just as much to spend money earned with love.
“Customers are expected to spend a record of $ 27.5 billion on Valentine’s Day this year,” according to an annual study by the National Retail Federation (NRF) and Prosper Insights & Analytics.
Classic Rom-Coms to see on Valentine’s Day
“Whether they are celebrating another important or someone else in their lives, Valentine’s Day makes sense for many,” said NRF Vice President and Consumer Mirrors Katherine Cullen in release.
Valentine’s Day consumer expenses this year are projected to exceed $ 25.8 billion last year and the previous $ 27.4 billion record set in 2020.
“Customers are looking for special ways to treat their loved ones and can expect retailers to offer the best gift options and agreements,” Cullen added.
The survey also found that 56% of customers plan to celebrate Valentine’s Day this year, from 53% to 2024.

Valentine’s Day is a case that usually involves giving gifts. (Istock)
Is Valentine’s Material Mategist?
If one perceives Valentine’s Day as materialistic depends on personal beliefs and values.
Some may choose to celebrate the day with significant, non -material gestures, while others may embrace the tradition of exchange of gifts as a way to express love. Theeller lies in hitting a balance between material expressions and the emotional essence of the celebration.
The economic aspects that surround holidays like Valentine’s Day attract focus away from human relations, perhaps weakening other forms of social interaction, according to Forbes.
So while Valentine’s Day can be a traditional romance holiday, there is nothing accidental about her tendency to hit your pockets.
What are the origins of Valentine’s Day?
There is a lot of speculation and mystery about the true Valentine’s identity and the exact origin of the holiday, but it seems to be a combination of Christian traditions and some pagans.
The Roman Catholic Church recognizes various Christian martyrs who were executed while trying to practice their faith or help the persecuted prisoners.
On this day in history, February 14, 270 AD, the beaten valentine, was proved to oppose the prohibition of emperor marriage
In a legend, Valentin acts as a priest in ancient Rome, making a secret marriage for young lovers after Emperor Claudius II forbade young people from marrying the city so that they would stay in his army, according to History. com.
After Valentine’s actions were discovered, he was sentenced to death and was preceded by the Emperor.
Another legend suggests that Valentine was imprisoned for his beliefs and sent a letter to a young girl signed “from your Valentine”, inspiring the tradition of sending love notes on this day, notes history.com.
While the exact details behind the individual’s identity are mysterious and lack the concrete historical records, most of the stories about the feast’s name seek to portray it as a romantic and heroic figure during Christian persecution by the Romans.

Valentine’s Day has evolved into a celebration of love and love marked by the exchange of cards, flowers and signs of love. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Why do we celebrate Valentine’s Day?
Valentine’s Day Association with romantic love can be traced in the Middle Ages, when the notion of polite love flourished. Over time, the day evolved to a celebration of love and love marked by the exchange of cards, flowers and signs of love.
Today, it is a widely celebrated and commercialized case to express love and appreciation.
Valentine’s Day Quiz! How well do you know these facts about the annual day of love?
Modern Valentine’s Day became the most popular in the UK during the 17th century, with the tradition of letters written to emphasize an individual’s love for a lover. The oppression technology that emerged in the dawn of the 20th century helped to popularize its influence throughout the English-speaking world.
However, the origin of the way Valentine’s Day became a big trading holiday apparently can be traced to the United States.

National Retail Federation projects Americans will spend $ 27.5 billion on Valentine’s Day in 2025. (Reuters/Mike Fresh/Photo File)
While the practice of donating your Valentine’s greeting cards was a centuries -old tradition in England, where the feast was born the Library of Congress.
For more living items, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle.
At first, the celebration of the old world was “often forgotten” and “neglected” by them in the shade things took a turn in the 1840s when the holiday turned into something “not to be lost”, the author Leigh Eric Schmidt wrote in the 1995 book, “Consumer Rites: Buying and Sale of American Holidays”.
Traders outside the card industry, such as jewelers, florists and sweets, eventually joined the gang.

Valentine’s Day may be a traditional holiday for romance, but there is nothing accidental about her tendency to hit your pockets. (Istock)
Click here to sign up in our Living Newspaper
“When the traders rediscovered (the holiday), the first turned the latter, not the other way around, as traders systematically extended the market apparatus to the field of celebration,” Schmidt wrote.
According to NRF, the most popular gift categories this year include candy (56%), flowers (40%), postcards (40%), an evening (35%) and jewelry (22%).
Americans plan to spend $ 6.5 billion in jewelry, $ 5.4 billion in an evening, $ 2.9 billion in flowers and $ 2.5 billion in candy.
Click here to get the FOX News app
About $ 1.4 billion will only be spent on postcards.
Philip Nieto and Kerren Keith Gaynor contributed to this report.