Big supermarkets and other major retailers have been in talks with the Government about relaxing Sunday trading laws after longer opening hours were allowed during the Olympics.
Retailers, trade bodies and the Government are thought to be discussing the impact of the temporary lifting of restrictions, with a view to a permanent change.
Asda is among the firms providing customer feedback on the extended trading hours for the Games, according to the Mail on Sunday newspaper.
The Walmart-owned firm is understood to be in favour of allowing permanent longer opening on Sundays after what it claims was a successful relaxation earlier this month.
Retailers are only allowed to trade for six hours on a Sunday, between 10am and 6pm. But the Government passed emergency legislation to relax the law during the Olympics and the upcoming Paralympics.
Andy Clarke, chief executive of Asda, reportedly said: "The extended hours have become more popular as time has moved on."
Communities Secretary Eric Pickles is believed to be open to the possibility of a permanent change.
The restrictions are designed to protect smaller, family-run stores from competition from supermarkets, by allowing shops of less than 3,000 sq ft to open for longer than six hours.
Many supermarket-owned convenience stores already qualify under these rules as small shops.
An Asda spokesman added: "Our customers like the convenience of us being open longer as it means they can shop when it suits them, not when it suits us.
"It's always been the case in Scotland, and customers in England and Wales are sometimes left scratching their heads as to why we have to chuck them out at 4pm on a Sunday."
However, the proposition to relax Sunday trading laws was met with criticism by one church leader, who argued that Sundays should devoted to spending time with family members, not filling shopping trollies.
The Archdeacon of Norwich, The Venerable Jan McFarlane, told Sky News: "People need to have the chance to have time to reflect, relax and spend time with their family."