India’s e-retail market hits $65bn in 2025, with Q-commerce and Gen Z shoppers driving rapid growth. Market expected to reach $180bn by 2030.

New Delhi: India’s online retail market 2025 has reached an estimated $65–66 billion in gross merchandise value (GMV), and is projected to grow at over 20 per cent annually, reaching $170–180 billion by 2030, according to a joint report by Bain & Company and Flipkart released on Thursday.
The report highlighted that India’s e‑retail GMV 2025 grew 19–21 per cent year-on-year, with growth accelerating in the latter half of the year, driven by improving macroeconomic conditions, rising consumer sentiment, and strong private consumption. Private consumption growth rose from 8 per cent (2022–24) to 10.5 per cent in 2025, supported by GST cuts, income tax relief, easing inflation, and lower lending rates.
Second-half 2025 growth reached 22–24 per cent, while early 2026 (Q1) saw an estimated 23–25 per cent growth, signalling a revival in discretionary spending.
Also Read| Sensex set for ‘big move’: Morgan Stanley sees 22% surge to 95,000
Q-commerce—ultra-fast delivery within 30 minutes—doubled annually over the past two years, achieving $10–11 billion GMV in 2025, with projections to reach $65–70 billion by 2030. Traditional e-retail, however, will remain the backbone of the sector, accounting for 60–65 per cent of the overall e-retail market by 2030.
India is emerging as a global consumption powerhouse, expected to capture 1 in 8 incremental consumption dollars globally over the next five years. The online shopper base more than doubled over five years to 290–300 million in 2025, supported by a rapidly expanding seller ecosystem and deeper geographic penetration.
Gen Z consumers accounted for 40–45 per cent of e‑retail shoppers and contributed roughly half of incremental orders in 2025. Spending per shopper among Gen Z grew 2.5 times faster than other cohorts in metropolitan cities, driven by trends in lifestyle, beauty, and electronics, as well as influencer-led social media engagement, immersive video feeds, and use of instant credit.
Also read| Don’t stop at 15 years: How to extend your PPF account and keep earning tax-free interest
“Shopping behaviour in quick commerce is distinct; high-intent missions result in faster search, quicker checkout, and higher conversion rates. Sessions last less than five minutes, roughly half the duration of traditional e-commerce journeys,” said Manan Bhasin.
With this trajectory, India’s e-commerce market in 2030 is poised to remain a key driver of economic growth, digital adoption, and global retail trends.
IANS
Published: 09 Apr 2026, 02:45 pm IST
Subscribe to our Newsletter
Get Latest Mathrubhumi Updates in English
Disclaimer: Kindly avoid objectionable, derogatory, unlawful and lewd comments, while responding to reports. Such comments are punishable under cyber laws. Please keep away from personal attacks. The opinions expressed here are the personal opinions of readers and not that of Mathrubhumi.

