A new survey reveals that nearly 80% of people who drink alcohol have shopped on the web while intoxicated.

And while the results can be hilarious, drunk shopping is a multi-billion dollar national habit.

@HeleneStJames Helen This was my best drunk eBay purchase pic.twitter.com/jNWnPtLzF7 — Phil Barry (@invecta18) February 26, 2017

According to a survey by tech and business newsletter The Hustle, drunk Americans spend approximately $45 billion per year, with an average annual spend of $444 per drunk shopper.

Most common? Clothing and shoes, while Amazon remains the shopping platform of choice.

The findings are based on a survey of 2,174 alcohol-consuming readers between March 11-18 of this year. The average respondent was 36-years-old, and has an income of $92,000 per year, more than double the national average. Thus, The Hustle's wealthier readers may skew the results when extrapolated - but we're having fun with this one.

Overall, 79% of all alcohol-consuming respondents have made at least one drunken purchase in their lifetime — though this varies a bit based on demographics. -The Hustle

Women (80%) are slightly more likely than men (78%) to drunk shop. This makes sense since women generally shop more than men — especially online. Drunk shoppers also tend to be younger. Millennials outrank baby boomers by 13%, which might be attributed to the rise of e-commerce (we’ll get to this later). Certain professionals also seem to be more inclined to shop drunk than others. We limited our data to jobs with the highest response rates then parsed out the 5 industries that are most and least likely to shop under the influence. -The Hustle

my drunk purchase from two months ago finally got here from china pic.twitter.com/Wfzx7pnvk1 — jim, agent of chaos (@urvillageidiot) March 20, 2018

What's the alcohol of choice while drunk shopping? Beer, followed by wine, followed by whiskey.

Another interesting metric is that people who shop while drunk have around 10 drinks per week, while those who typically shop sober consume half as much.

As far as average spent per year:

Our average respondent reports dropping $444 per year on drunk purchases — from life-size cut-outs of Kim Jong-un to 30-pound bags of Idaho potatoes. A little back-of-the-napkin math gives us a rough estimate of the drunk shopping market at large: There are ~130m alcohol-consuming adults in the US. In our survey findings, 79% of alcohol-consuming adults shop drunk at an average annual spend of $444. Assuming these rates hold true at a national level (purely speculative), drunk shopping is a ~$45B per year market. Extrapolating this further, we determined the average lifetime spend on drunk purchases is $4,187 — good for a total drunken expenditure of nearly half a trillion dollars.

When it comes to drunk shopping by profession, those in the fashion industry are the biggest, richest drunks - at an average of $949 spent per year, followed by writers, medical professionals and those in the fitness industry.

Let's all take a minute to appreciate this drunk Amazon purchase 🙌🏽 pic.twitter.com/N8L09HKD7e — Morgan Stamper (@MorganLStamper) July 24, 2016

Who spends the least while shopping drunk? Government workers, engineers and - in last place, those working in retail.

Geographically speaking Kentucky is oddly at the top along with Connecticut. Though, the survey may have had one really rich respondent in each state that skewed the results. Who knows.

Kentuckians top the charts with a $742 annual spend. In fact, the entire South — a region known for its fine bourbon — is a blanket of red. California, the country’s wine capital, is the lone over-achiever on the otherwise mediocre West Coast. This bears little semblance to the CDC’s analysis of the heaviest binge-drinking states (in fact, it’s almost opposite). But it shows that the economics of drunk shopping is a more complex matter than simply parsing out where people drink the most.

As far as platform of choice, Amazon leads the pack, followed by Ebay, Etsy, Target and Walmart. At least two of those are worth an intervention if you ever catch your friends drunk shopping at Walmart, for example.

Clothing and shoes are the goods of choice while drunk. Studies have shown that people who base their self-worth on appearance are more likely to imbibe alcohol, so there is some tenuous linkage here. But this also ties in with the rapid rise of the direct-to-consumer fashion industry. Entertainment (movies, games) and tech gadgets are also popular choices — though the party train seems to abruptly halt at software (if you’ve purchased a copy of Microsoft Excel drunk, we need to talk.)

Weirdest purchases, according to The Hustle's readers?

200 pounds of fresh, 10-foot tall bamboo

A World War 2-era bayonet

A full-size inflatable bouncy castle (“For my living room”)

A breast pump (“I’m a dude”)

A splinter that was removed from the foot of former NBA Star, Olden Polynice

The same vest Michael J. Fox had on in Back to the Future

A $2,200 pair of night vision goggles

Tons of international fights (Azerbaijan, Iceland, Ukraine, Tunisia)

An NRA membership

A trilogy of Satanic religious books

Who could regret $2,200 night vision goggles?