Every day is turning into Cyber Monday.

At least that's the indication from National Retail Federation estimates that found the number of Americans shopping online creeped past those who went out into the world over the long Thanksgiving weekend. The industry group's survey found that an estimated 151 million people shopped either in stores, online, or both over the weekend. Of those, nearly 102 million of them headed to stores, while more than 103 million said they shopped online.

"Just as many people want that unique, exclusive online deal as they do that in-store promotion,” NRF president and CEO Matthew Shay said.

The group's report was released yesterday, which means today's Cyber Monday bonanza isn't even included in those numbers. According to an estimate from Forrester Research, online holiday sales in the US are expected to be a hefty more than $95 billion. Cyber Monday alone could bring in $2 billion in online sales, Forrester says. The NRF estimates that more than 121 million people plan to shop online today.

Compared to the past, what exactly does this mean? The NRF's methodology for its survey has changed, so it says comparisons to its results last year aren't valid. But a report from IBM noted that online Black Friday shopping saw an increase of 21.5 percent over last year. ComScore's numbers were more conservative, estimating that online shopping from desktop computers increased by 10 percent. Meanwhile, analytics company ShopperTrak says that while it expects an increase in brick-and-mortar sales during the 2015 holiday season as a whole, preliminary estimates show that IRL stores on Thanksgiving and Black Friday had "thinner crowds" compared to last year. All of which to say—ho, ho, ho, we love to shop. But we'd rather stay home to do it.