5 scenarios that will drain your wallet during the holidays

It's the holiday season and shopping is on a 24/7 loop. So if you get a little loopy, well, you might want to step away from the laptop and the credit cards.

"I saw this charge come through on my PayPal and I was like 'What did I buy?' " said Angela Anter, 50, who admits she's been known to shop online after a few cocktails with friends.

What she bought in August was a subscription box at $40 a month for snacks that fit into a Keto-friendly diet. So far, she's spent about $200 on snacks, rationalizing that she doesn't need to cancel the service because she gets to try new treats every month. A year's worth of snacks, though, would mean she's going to be out $480.

Last Christmas, Anter shopped online to spend about $30 on a necklace with an inspirational message, something like "She believed she could, so she did," for a young woman on her list.

The problem? Well, shopping when your inhibitions are down means you're generally not reading the fine print. The necklace, which she ordered in November, didn't show up in time for Christmas. It didn't arrive until February. She didn't pay attention to details like the necklace was being shipped out of China.

"I would never have done that had I not been drinking," she said.

All sorts of things can throw you for a loop when it comes to the last-minute crunch for gift buying. The 50% off sales are flashing across every single screen — the TV, emails, online websites. Can you really afford to miss out on the next big sale?

Retailers say the next big shopping day is the last Saturday before Christmas — Dec. 21 this year — which the industry refers to as "Super Saturday." Last year, the National Retail Federation had forecast that 134 million people would shop on Super Saturday.

Yes, you can buy too much of a good thing. So here's a look at what can throw you for a loop and drain your wallet:

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Ask yourself: Do I need one in every color?

It’s not quite like signing up for the box-of-the-month. But do you really need gloves in every color?

Maybe you found a nice pair of knit gloves for $20 and so you starting thinking, "Hey maybe I should get one in black, one in red and another in bright yellow." Maybe you like the feel of a turtleneck that cost $25. But it's nothing but an old QVC trick to get you to 'buy more, save more" and pick up two or three different colors.