Global Quick Commerce Market Trends and Insights
Rising Demand for Immediate Convenience and Fill-In Shopping
Immediate availability has become a standard expectation in dense urban areas, and that shift is raising repeat usage in the global quick commerce market. Consumers often use these apps for missing ingredients, baby care items, household basics, or late-night top-up needs rather than for full weekly baskets. That pattern lowers price comparison because the trigger is urgency, not basket optimization. Dual-income households are placing a clearer value on time saved, which helps platforms retain fee-paying demand even when offline alternatives remain cheaper. As long as service reliability stays high, this behavior supports recurring orders and stronger customer lifetime value in the quick commerce market.Dark-Store and Micro-Fulfillment Network Expansion
Dark-store expansion remains one of the clearest scale levers in the global quick commerce market. Eternal said Blinkit ended Q4 FY2026 with 2,243 active stores and is targeting 3,000 by March 2027, which shows that leading operators are still prioritizing network depth. Amazon India also committed INR 2,800 crore (USD 337 million) to expand Amazon Now to more than 1,000 micro-fulfillment centers across 100 cities, reinforcing the same direction of travel. A denser store grid shortens delivery distance, lowers breach risk, and improves inventory availability within tight service windows. That is why store buildout continues even when payback periods remain uneven across cities in the quick commerce market.Persistent Last-Mile Cost And Thin Basket Economics
Last-mile cost remains the main structural brake on the quick commerce market. In India, sub-30-minute operators were reported to carry logistics expenses equal to 19% to 25% of GMV, far above the level for slower 2-hour models. CNBC TV18 also reported estimated delivery cost floors of INR 95-100 (USD 1.1-1.2) per order and suggested that breakeven requires average order values near INR 750 (USD 9.0) under current rider cost structures. Blinkit's positive adjusted EBITDA in Q4 FY2026 shows that improvement is possible, but that outcome depended on scale, density, retail media support, and careful geographic selection. Until basket values move higher on a wider base, unit economics will continue to limit how fast the quick commerce market can scale across lower-density cities.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Mobile-First Ordering and Cashless Checkout Adoption
- Category Expansion Beyond Grocery Missions
- Gig-Worker Regulation And Dark-Store Zoning Scrutiny
Segment Analysis
Food and groceries accounted for 46.34% of the quick commerce market size in 2025, which confirms that staple replenishment is still the entry point for most users. The segment benefits from frequent purchase cycles and routine household demand, so it remains the traffic anchor for the quick commerce market. Fresh produce and dairy deepen retention because they push operators to invest in cold-chain capable micro-fulfillment and tighter quality control. Snacks, beverages, and home cleaning items also fit well with the fill-in mission, and they raise basket values without adding much operational complexity. This mix explains why grocery-led platforms can widen frequency first and then layer in higher-margin categories over time.Personal care and OTC pharma is projected to grow at a 21.34% CAGR through 2031, making it the fastest-growing product category in the quick commerce market. Zepto launched 10-minute medicine delivery in August 2025, which shows how operators are moving from convenience-led positioning to more routine health-related demand. The same network can also support flowers, gifts, and other occasion-led purchases, which gives platforms more use cases without a separate fulfillment buildout. Electronics and accessories add another layer because they lift order values and improve advertising potential for branded sellers. As non-grocery selection widens, the quick commerce market gains a healthier margin mix and less reliance on pure grocery missions.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Product Category
- Grocery and Staples
- Fresh Produce and Dairy
- Snacks and Beverages
- Personal Care and OTC Pharma
- Home and Cleaning Supplies
- Electronics and Accessories
- Pet Care
- Flowers and Gifts
- Other Product Categories
- By Delivery Time Promise
- Less than 30 Minutes
- 31-60 Minutes and More
- By Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- South America
- Brazil
- Argentina
- Chile
- Colombia
- Rest of South America
- Europe
- Germany
- United Kingdom
- France
- Italy
- Spain
- Netherlands
- Russia
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- India
- Japan
- South Korea
- Australia
- Indonesia
- Singapore
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- Middle East
- Saudi Arabia
- United Arab Emirates
- Turkey
- Qatar
- Rest of Middle East
- Africa
- South Africa
- Egypt
- Nigeria
- Rest of Africa
- North America
Geography Analysis
Asia-Pacific held 39.34% of the quick commerce market share in 2025 and is set to expand at a 21.54% CAGR through 2031, which keeps the region at the center of the global quick commerce market. China remains the scale anchor because Meituan, Alibaba, and JD.com already operate large logistics and merchant ecosystems that support rapid local fulfillment. The region is also seeing aggressive promotional competition, with Alibaba and JD.com each earmarking RMB 10 billion (USD 1.4 billion) for subsidies and incentives as platforms defend frequency and order volume. In India, rapid network rollout by Blinkit, Zepto, Swiggy Instamart, and Amazon Now is pushing the quick commerce market beyond top metros and into a wider set of cities.North America represents a more measured but financially important part of the quick commerce market, with platforms increasingly focused on grocery profitability rather than growth at any cost. In the United States, Instacart reported Q1 2026 GTV of USD 10.288 billion, up 13% year on year, and adjusted EBITDA of USD 300 million at a 29% margin, which underlines the strength of its operating model. DoorDash completed its Deliveroo acquisition in October 2025 for GBP 2.9 billion (USD 3.86 billion), linking U.S. scale with operations across the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Belgium, Ireland, Singapore, Hong Kong, the UAE, and Australia. Europe has tighter zoning and labor scrutiny, so the quick commerce market there is more exposed to permit constraints and compliance-driven cost inflation. That pressure is favoring operators with stronger balance sheets and making it harder for smaller standalone entrants to hold urban share in Western Europe.
The Middle East is becoming one of the most concentrated regional pockets in the quick commerce market, led by Talabat's strong grocery and retail momentum. Talabat said grocery and retail GMV rose 45% in Q4 2025, and the company opened a 22,405 square meter distribution center in Cairo with capacity for 1.6 million items a day, giving it a larger operating base for Egypt and nearby markets. South America remains earlier in development, with Brazil and Colombia showing the clearest activity through multi-vertical platforms such as Rappi, while cold-chain and density constraints still limit broader rollout. Africa is still nascent, but urban growth and rising digital payments keep the long-term case for the quick commerce market intact even though current order economics remain tight in many cities.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Meituan
- JD.com, Inc.
- DoorDash, Inc.
- Maplebear Inc.
- Gopuff Holdings LLC
- Delivery Hero SE
- Getir Perakende Lojistik Anonim Sirketi
- Blink Commerce Private Limited
- Swiggy Limited
- KiranaKart Technologies Private Limited
- Supermarket Grocery Supplies Private Limited
- Rappi, Inc.
- Grab Holdings Limited
- Uber Technologies, Inc.
- Amazon.com, Inc.
- Talabat Holding plc
- Wolt Enterprises Oy
- Glovoapp23, S.L.
- Shipt, Inc.
- Ocado Retail Limited
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Meituan
- JD.com, Inc.
- DoorDash, Inc.
- Maplebear Inc.
- Gopuff Holdings LLC
- Delivery Hero SE
- Getir Perakende Lojistik Anonim Sirketi
- Blink Commerce Private Limited
- Swiggy Limited
- KiranaKart Technologies Private Limited
- Supermarket Grocery Supplies Private Limited
- Rappi, Inc.
- Grab Holdings Limited
- Uber Technologies, Inc.
- Amazon.com, Inc.
- Talabat Holding plc
- Wolt Enterprises Oy
- Glovoapp23, S.L.
- Shipt, Inc.
- Ocado Retail Limited

