Meanwhile seasonally adjusted spending on hospitality rose by 1.3 per cent ($14 million) and consumer durables rose by 0.8 per cent ($11 million).
Overall retail card spending fell 0.4 per cent in November, dampened by the fuel price-related decline.
But core electronic card spending rose 0.5 per cent month on month, as lower petrol prices freed up additional discretionary cash-flow, ASB economist Mark Smith said.
He noted that the Black Friday sales also appeared to have boosted apparel and durable retail, with hospitality having a good November month.
The crude oil price surged so much this year it sparked fears about petrol heading towards $3 a litre. Then it crashed so hard we are now more likely to see it below $2 a litre by Christmas.
Oil prices peaked in early October, which coincided with a fall in the kiwi dollar and new fuel taxes to hit drivers in the pocket.
But in a dramatic market shift - which caught many traders off guard - oil prices have slumped in the past two months.
They have fallen as much as one third since a peak on October 3.
The kiwi dollar has also bounced back - up about 7 per cent since the start of October