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Walmart Black Friday deals start Monday: Take a look at what’s on sale

Walmart is also offering its Walmart+ subscribers early access to this year’s deals, allowing members to begin their online shopping a whole four hours before everyone else. (Getty Images)

(NEXSTAR) – Walmart isn’t even pretending to wait around for Black Friday anymore.

The first deals roll out Monday, October 18.

The “Black Friday Deals for Days” promotion includes several separate shopping “events” for online and in-store customers.

This year’s Black Friday events, according to Walmart, are designed to stretch the deals across three different shopping periods — rather than center them around a single date — to deliver a “safe, convenient shopping experience” for customers. The retailer had also hosted a similar “Black Friday Deals for Days” event ahead of the 2020 holiday season, in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The first deals start at 8:15 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 18, while supplies last. Select offers include a Ninja 4QT Air Fryer for $69, a 55-inch TCL Smart 4K UHD TV for $298, and a 442-piece Lego set for $20.

Walmart is offering its Walmart+ subscribers early access to this year’s deals, allowing members to begin their online shopping four hours before everyone else.

Here are the other events:

Customers can visit Walmart’s Black Friday 2021 portal for more.

This year’s Black Friday events, according to Walmart, are designed to stretch the deals across three different shopping periods, rather than center them around a single date. (Walmart)

Walmart isn’t the only major retailer spacing out its Black Friday deals. Shops and marketplaces had been moving their Black Friday events earlier and earlier even before the pandemic, and now retailers including Amazon, Target, and Best Buy, among others, are offering Black Friday deals a whole month before Thanksgiving.

Most of these deals are coming just in time, too. The Better Business Bureau is advising shoppers to buy their holiday gifts early because of a microchip shortage that could make it difficult (or just more expensive) to buy computers, tablets, phones, or even electronic toys.  

“If you find it, grab it right now,” Leslie Blackwell, the director of public affairs at BBB serving central Virginia, told WRIC.