---
title: "U.S. Retail Sales Surge 1.7% in March, Marking Largest Increase in Over a Year as Oil Price Spike Drives Overall Growth"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/283506300.md"
description: "U.S. retail sales rose 1.7% month-over-month in March, posting the largest increase in over a year. A 15.5% surge in gas station spending, driven by the Iran conflict pushing up oil prices, was the primary catalyst, while tax refunds from the 'Big Beautiful' bill and a stabilization of U.S. stocks also supported consumer resilience. Economists warn that as refund benefits fade, high oil prices persist, and hiring slows, K-shaped consumption divergence will intensify; whether this strong momentum can continue remains to be tested by April's GDP data"
datetime: "2026-04-21T13:06:49.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/283506300.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283506300.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/283506300.md)
---

# U.S. Retail Sales Surge 1.7% in March, Marking Largest Increase in Over a Year as Oil Price Spike Drives Overall Growth

U.S. March retail sales data came in significantly stronger than expected, recording the largest single-month increase in over a year, demonstrating short-term resilience in consumer spending. However, economists caution that whether this momentum can sustain itself remains uncertain.

According to data released Tuesday by the U.S. Commerce Department, **total retail sales for March increased 1.7% month-over-month**, surpassing market expectations of 1.4% and exceeding the revised 0.7% gain in February. The Iran conflict pushed fuel prices to their highest levels since 2022, **driving a 15.5% monthly surge in gas station spending, which became the primary driver of the overall figure.**

Excluding automobiles and gasoline, sales rose 0.6% month-over-month, also beating the expected 0.3%.

The "control group" of sales, which tracks the core contribution to GDP consumption, grew by 0.7%, reaching its highest level since last August. This indicates a broad-based uptrend rather than one driven solely by oil prices.

This outperformance has alleviated market concerns regarding U.S. consumer resilience. Bank of America analysts attribute this strength to the continued injection of tax refunds related to the "Big Beautiful" bill and the relatively limited stock market decline triggered by the Iran conflict, which has not yet caused a substantive wealth effect impact on high-income consumer spending.

However, economists warn that the factors currently supporting consumption may not be sustainable: **the tax filing season is nearing its end, with refund benefits gradually fading; fuel costs remain elevated; and hiring growth is also flattening.** The Bureau of Economic Analysis is scheduled to release preliminary estimates for first-quarter GDP on April 30.

## Oil Prices Drive Growth, With Nearly All Categories Gaining Ground

March retail sales growth was primarily driven by gas station spending. The Iran conflict pushed fuel prices to their highest levels since 2022, driving a 15.5% month-over-month surge in gas station spending. Excluding gasoline, sales grew 0.6% month-over-month; excluding both automobiles and gasoline, the increase remained at 0.6%, both far exceeding market expectations.

Of the 13 categories covered in the report, nearly all recorded positive growth, including furniture, electronics, and general merchandise. Automobile sales rose 0.5% month-over-month, but auto dealers saw a noticeable decline. The only category in the report covering services—restaurants and bars—saw revenue rise slightly by 0.1% month-over-month.

High-frequency card spending data recently shows divergence. According to Bloomberg, reports from PNC Financial Services Group and Bank of America Research indicate strong spending in discretionary categories such as travel and electronics, while the Visa Consumer Spending Index shows that, excluding gasoline, spending in discretionary, non-discretionary, and dining categories experienced an overall decline.

## Tax Refund Effects and Stock Market Stabilization Support Consumption

Bank of America analysts believe two key factors supported the better-than-expected performance of March consumption.

**First is the tax refund effect from the "Big Beautiful" bill.** Since the start of this year's tax filing season, the bill has injected approximately $45 billion in fiscal stimulus to consumers. Although lower than previously expected, it still provided effective support for spending. Data from the bank shows that year-to-date 2026 refund growth rates are significantly higher among high-income households compared to low-income households, consistent with expectations that tax reforms benefit groups with heavier tax liabilities.

**Second is the relatively contained decline in the U.S. stock market.** The stock market drop triggered by the Iran conflict fell less than 10% from its January peak to its March low. Bank of America believes that the stock market would need to fall more than 20% continuously before a wealth effect could substantially impact spending by high-income groups. Currently, the bank's data shows no clear signs of high-income households cutting back on spending.

## K-Shaped Consumption Divergence Persists as Employment Data Strengthens

Despite rising oil prices, Bank of America data shows that overall card spending, excluding gasoline, remains at healthy levels. However, the impact of oil price shocks is not evenly distributed across income levels—energy expenditures account for a larger share of total consumption for low-income households, and the year-over-year growth rate of gasoline spending among low-income groups is slightly higher than that of high-income groups, further reinforcing the K-shaped consumption divergence pattern.

In terms of the labor market, the ADP Weekly Employment Change Index shows that average new jobs added per week over the past four weeks were 54,750, remaining robust even during the Iran conflict. This suggests that weak consumer confidence has not yet substantively dragged down employer hiring willingness, providing additional support for the sustainability of consumption.

## Market Reaction

Following the data release, the U.S. dollar index briefly rallied, trading at 98.25. U.S. stock futures showed little volatility, with Nasdaq 100 futures maintaining a gain of approximately 0.4%.

The yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note rose briefly, trading at 4.273%. Spot gold dipped slightly, trading at $4,777.09 per ounce.

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