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120 eCommerce Marketplace Statistics for 2026 | eCommerce Manager
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MARKETPLACES · 2026 BENCHMARKS

120 eCommerce Marketplace Statistics for 2026

Amazon, Walmart, TikTok Shop, Temu — marketplaces are now the default discovery layer for half of all shoppers. 120 numbers from 22 sources, organized so an operator can lift them straight into a channel-strategy deck.

Updated May 9, 2026
Read 24 min
Sources 22 cited
Stats 120 benchmarks
$8.1T
Projected global ecommerce sales in 2026 — marketplaces capture a large share
49%
Of consumers start product search on marketplaces, not search engines
17%+
Of online sales now route through social platforms
On this page

Why marketplace data matters even if you're a DTC-first brand

For a $5M–$50M DTC operator, marketplaces are not optional anymore — they're the discovery layer. 49% of shoppers start their product search on Amazon or a comparable marketplace, not a search engine. Even brands that convert most revenue on their own site are being researched, compared, and price-checked on marketplaces first.

This guide pulls 120 statistics from 22 sources across six areas: consumer behavior, social commerce, email, mobile, personalization, and AI. The framing throughout is marketplace-specific — Amazon, Walmart, TikTok Shop, Temu — but the strategic read applies to any operator running a hybrid channel mix.

Three numbers worth walking into a planning meeting with: marketplaces are the first touch for nearly half of all product searches, 17%+ of online sales now flow through social platforms feeding those marketplaces, and 73% of brands have adopted AI but only 27% see real ROI. The rest is detail.

CONSUMER BEHAVIOR

1. Consumer behavior — how shoppers actually use marketplaces

Marketplaces are now the first touch for half of all product searches. The numbers below show a shopper who is price-sensitive, review-driven, and comparing alternatives that sit one click away.

  • 01
    Global ecommerce sales are expected to exceed $8.1 trillion in 2026, with online channels representing about 24% of total retail — marketplaces capture a large share of this traffic.
  • 02
    eCommerce will account for 21.8% of global retail purchases in 2026, up from 21% in 2025, showing continued channel shift.
  • 03
    Over 2.9 billion people are expected to shop online in 2026, expanding the addressable audience for global marketplaces.
  • 04
    Around 49% of consumers start their product search on marketplaces like Amazon, not on search engines, making marketplaces the primary discovery entry point.
  • 05
    About 63% of shopping journeys begin online, even when the purchase is offline, which often means marketplaces are the first touch.
  • 06
    Approximately 81% of shoppers research products online before buying, often comparing marketplace listings, prices, and reviews.
  • 07
    78% of consumers compare prices across multiple websites before purchasing, intensifying marketplace pricing competition.
  • 08
    Around 65% of shoppers delay purchases until discounts are available, making promotions and deal mechanics critical in marketplaces.
  • 09
    Over 70% of consumers became more price sensitive in 2025–26, pushing marketplaces to compete on price, deals, and perceived value.
  • 10
    About 45% of consumers switch brands due to better pricing, which is particularly visible in marketplaces where alternatives are one click away.
  • 11
    Cashback and rewards programs attract over 40% of online shoppers, giving marketplaces with strong loyalty programs an edge.
  • 12
    eCommerce accounts for roughly 16–17% of US retail sales, but over one-third of all retail transactions involve online channels at some point, reinforcing omnichannel journeys that cross marketplaces and stores.
  • 13
    Daily online shopping dropped from 21% to 9% of consumers between 2025–26, signaling a move from pandemic-style over-buying to more deliberate marketplace usage.
  • 14
    Consumers interact with an average of 6–8 touchpoints before purchasing, meaning marketplace ads, search results, and product detail pages all play a role across the journey.
  • 15
    Nearly 75% of consumers expect consistent experiences across online and offline channels, including consistent pricing and product information between marketplaces and brand sites.
  • 16
    Fast websites, simple checkout, flexible payment options, and quick delivery are key purchase drivers for 2026 shoppers.
  • 17
    Buyers are more informed and selective, reading reviews and using social proof heavily before buying on marketplaces.
  • 18
    Trust and transparency — clear pricing, return policies, and authenticity — are essential, especially on multi-seller marketplaces.
  • 19
    Social proof and FOMO marketing (e.g., "only X left", "trending now") meaningfully influence marketplace buyers' decisions in 2026.
  • 20
    Personalized recommendations influence up to 31% of ecommerce revenues, heavily visible in marketplace "recommended for you" and "frequently bought together" modules.
SOCIAL COMMERCE

2. Social commerce — the research layer feeding the marketplace funnel

Social drives discovery; marketplaces close the sale. 17%+ of online sales now route through social platforms, and the brands winning in 2026 treat the social-to-marketplace handoff as one funnel, not two channels.

  • 01
    Global ecommerce sales are forecast to surpass $6.8–6.9 trillion in 2026, with social and marketplace commerce increasingly intertwined.
  • 02
    By 2026, over 17% of online sales will occur through social platforms, as social commerce merges discovery and purchase in feed-native shops and marketplace integrations.
  • 03
    Livestream shopping is expected to reach $50 billion in the US in 2026, much of it flowing through marketplace or marketplace-style environments.
  • 04
    Social commerce in the US alone is projected to hit nearly $70 billion by 2026, reinforcing social as a parallel "marketplace layer" over traditional ecommerce.
  • 05
    Social media trends, influencer opinions, and online communities now shape many buying decisions, directing shoppers to marketplace listings and storefronts.
  • 06
    Consumers rely heavily on social proof (reviews, creator content, UGC) before buying, which marketplaces surface via ratings and review counts.
  • 07
    A large share of younger shoppers discover products on TikTok and Instagram but convert on marketplaces like Amazon, reflecting a social-to-marketplace funnel.
  • 08
    Social commerce dominance means brands must coordinate pricing, product visibility, and inventory between social shops and core marketplaces.
  • 09
    Visual content and short-form videos depicting real use cases are now central to driving clicks from social feeds to marketplace product pages.
  • 10
    Consumers increasingly expect seamless hand-offs from social ads to marketplace product pages, with consistent pricing, offers, and visuals.
  • 11
    Social platforms act as a research layer, while marketplaces are the conversion layer; brands that fail to integrate both see lower ROAS.
  • 12
    As social commerce grows, it forces marketplaces to improve on-site engagement tools (e.g., videos, Q&A, live streams) to compete for time and attention.
  • 13
    Social commerce expansion pressures marketplaces to standardize creator and affiliate programs, making it easier for influencers to link directly to listings.
  • 14
    Social platforms and marketplaces both capitalize on FOMO and scarcity cues, which exploit cognitive biases to increase conversions.
  • 15
    "Best product" and "top rated" searches on mobile have grown by over 80% in recent years, often returning marketplace and social commerce results.
  • 16
    Deal-seeking behavior rises under inflation, boosting performance of limited-time offers and lightning deals on marketplaces promoted via social ads.
  • 17
    Brands increasingly use social proof from marketplaces (ratings, number of buyers) in their social creatives to close the trust gap.
  • 18
    Many marketplace sellers now plan acquisition budgets with social and marketplace combined, not as isolated channels.
  • 19
    Influencers often link to marketplace storefronts instead of brand sites, because shoppers are more comfortable with known checkout flows.
  • 20
    Social and marketplace convergence is one of the top ecommerce trends for 2026, forcing tighter integration of feeds, catalogs, and measurement.

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EMAIL

3. Email — the owned channel that still moves marketplace rank

Email looks like a DTC tactic, but for marketplace sellers it's the lever that drives review velocity, launch-day traffic spikes, and the list independence that reduces algorithm risk.

  • 01
    Average global ecommerce conversion rates are around 2–3%, with email often outperforming other traffic sources — even when traffic ultimately converts on marketplaces via tracked links.
  • 02
    Cart abandonment rates average 69–75%, making email and push retargeting essential for marketplace sellers who also operate DTC or hybrid funnels.
  • 03
    Email marketing drives roughly 20% of online sales in aggregate, giving marketplace brands a strong owned channel to support ranking and review velocity.
  • 04
    Email remains a high-ROI channel that can be used to direct repeat customers to marketplaces during promotions (e.g., Prime Day, Flipkart events).
  • 05
    Shoppers expect relevant, personalized offers, and irrelevant email messaging pushes them toward marketplace competitors where comparison is easier.
  • 06
    Many ecommerce sellers dedicate 8–12% of revenue to marketing, with top growers investing 15–20%, part of which funds email-driven traffic that boosts marketplace performance.
  • 07
    Consumers often research on marketplaces but subscribe to brand newsletters for exclusive discounts and early access, which then feed back into marketplace sales.
  • 08
    Personalized recommendations in email (based on browsing and purchase data) can boost revenue by 10–30%, mirroring the impact of on-site marketplace recommendations.
  • 09
    Email nurturing supports review generation by directing customers back to marketplace product pages for feedback, critical for ranking.
  • 10
    Around 81% of shoppers research online before buying, meaning email content (comparisons, guides) can influence later marketplace conversions.
  • 11
    Customers respond better to tailored communication, and email allows fine-grained segmentation by marketplace category, price band, or brand.
  • 12
    AI-assisted email tools in 2026 increasingly automate send-time optimization and product blocks, helping brands support marketplace launches more precisely.
  • 13
    Email is a key channel to push stock that is over-indexed on marketplaces, using urgency and limited-time offers.
  • 14
    Brands use email to educate customers on differences between buying on their site vs. marketplaces (shipping, returns, exclusives), steering volume strategically.
  • 15
    In omnichannel journeys where marketplaces are one of several destinations, email acts as a cross-channel glue, directing traffic where inventory and margins make most sense.
  • 16
    Personalized coupon codes and marketplace-exclusive offers highlighted via email can accelerate sales velocity, improving marketplace algorithmic ranking.
  • 17
    As hybrid shopping returns, email helps coordinate "research online, buy on marketplace, return in store" behaviors.
  • 18
    Email remains crucial to announce participation in marketplace-wide events (e.g., mega sale days), influencing traffic spikes and share of wallet.
  • 19
    Retailers using AI-driven personalization in email see significant uplift, which indirectly enhances marketplace performance by driving more qualified demand.
  • 20
    Many marketplace-native sellers increasingly build email lists through packaging inserts and post-purchase flows to reduce total dependence on marketplace algorithms.
MOBILE

4. Mobile commerce — where marketplace volume is growing fastest

Mobile ecommerce is heading toward $2.74 trillion in 2026 and marketplaces dominate app ecosystems. The persistent gap: traffic skews mobile while conversion still lags desktop.

  • 01
    Mobile ecommerce sales are expected to amount to about $2.74 trillion in 2026, a 9.2% increase over 2025.
  • 02
    Mobile commerce sales are projected to reach about $3.02 trillion by 2027, growing faster than overall ecommerce.
  • 03
    User penetration in ecommerce is expected to be 54.3% in 2026, rising to 58.1% by 2030, driven heavily by mobile adoption.
  • 04
    Global ecommerce growth is projected at roughly 8–10% annually toward 2026, with mobile marketplaces capturing much of this incremental volume.
  • 05
    Global ecommerce sales are expected to hit $6.88–7.4 trillion in 2026, depending on the forecast, with marketplaces dominating mobile app ecosystems.
  • 06
    Market analysts highlight a "mobile gap" as a massive opportunity, with many merchants still converting worse on mobile than on desktop despite traffic skewing mobile.
  • 07
    Mobile ecommerce sales are forecast to grow at an average annual rate of around 15% from 2018 to 2027, underlining the importance of mobile-first marketplace listings.
  • 08
    Tablet ecommerce sales are expected to reach about $54 billion by 2026, a smaller but relevant segment for certain browsing behaviors.
  • 09
    Shoppers increasingly expect fast load times, simple navigation, and one-tap checkout in mobile marketplace apps.
  • 10
    Mobile searches for "best product" and similar terms have grown by over 80%, often surfacing marketplace product lists and comparison pages.
  • 11
    Convenience (fast sites, easy checkout, flexible payments, quick delivery) is a top purchase driver in 2026, particularly on mobile.
  • 12
    Many marketplace buyers browse on mobile and purchase either on mobile or later on desktop, making cross-device consistency vital.
  • 13
    Marketplace apps leverage push notifications and personalized feeds to bring users back, contributing to recurring usage and higher lifetime value.
  • 14
    Emerging markets with low-cost smartphones and affordable data plans are a major driver of mobile marketplace growth.
  • 15
    Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and Africa are highlighted as regions where mobile marketplace participation is accelerating due to smartphone penetration.
  • 16
    Marketplace sellers that optimize titles, images, and bullets for mobile viewports see higher click-through rates in crowded mobile search results.
  • 17
    Hybrid shoppers often use mobile marketplaces in-store to check prices and reviews, influencing on-shelf conversions.
  • 18
    With user penetration above 50%, marketplaces are effectively default shopping apps for a large share of consumers worldwide.
  • 19
    Mobile-optimized localized payment options (wallets, BNPL) significantly improve conversion on marketplaces serving diverse regions.
  • 20
    Marketplaces that invest in mobile UX and app-native experiences are expected to capture more than their proportional share of ecommerce growth.

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PERSONALIZATION

5. Personalization — the marketplace monetization engine

Recommendation carousels and "frequently bought together" modules aren't features — they're up to 31% of marketplace revenue. The 2026 bar is real-time and AI-driven, with privacy transparency attached.

  • 01
    Over 80% of American shoppers expect personalized shopping experiences, including relevant recommendations on marketplaces.
  • 02
    Personalized product recommendations can increase revenue by 10–30%, making them a core monetization engine for marketplaces.
  • 03
    Personalized recommendations influence up to 31% of ecommerce revenues, which aligns directly with marketplace recommendation carousels.
  • 04
    Companies using AI-driven personalization earn about 40% more revenue than those that do not, underscoring the value of advanced personalization in marketplace environments.
  • 05
    While AI-driven recommendations can increase conversion rates by around 70%, only 41% of consumers feel personalization benefits justify privacy trade-offs, demanding transparent practices.
  • 06
    Personalization at scale is the top B2C priority in 2026, with 48.6% of marketers citing AI-driven personalization as their primary focus.
  • 07
    Personalization backfires when it is poorly executed; Forrester warns that about one-third of firms will frustrate customers with bad AI by late 2026.
  • 08
    AI-powered decision intelligence helps determine what to show, when, and to whom in real time, turning personalization into measurable impact across marketplace journeys.
  • 09
    Hyper-personalization using AI combines past behavior, real-time context, social signals, and even emotional cues to create highly tailored shopping experiences.
  • 10
    AI personalization also unlocks more effective cross-selling and upselling, an important lever in marketplaces with high SKU density.
  • 11
    Consumers increasingly expect marketplaces to remember preferences across devices and sessions, from size and style to favorite brands.
  • 12
    Personalization must balance relevance with privacy; consumers are more accepting when data use is clearly explained and value is evident.
  • 13
    Personalized pricing and dynamic offers are becoming more common, particularly in competitive categories like electronics and travel.
  • 14
    Shoppers respond well to contextual messaging, such as localized recommendations and seasonally relevant bundles.
  • 15
    Marketplace listings that align with self-expression and identity (e.g., niche aesthetics, cultural relevance) see better engagement, especially among younger consumers.
  • 16
    Personalization extends beyond products to content blocks — guides, how-tos, and UGC tailored to a shopper's interests.
  • 17
    As expectations rise, basic segmentation is no longer enough; real-time, AI-based personalization is becoming table stakes in leading marketplaces.
  • 18
    Many brands still overestimate how good their personalization is; studies show a sizable perception gap between retailers and consumers.
  • 19
    Subscription ecommerce, growing at 19% per year, often relies on personalized replenishment and curation models layered on top of marketplace behaviors.
  • 20
    Marketplaces that blend strong personalization with transparent data practices are best positioned to increase loyalty in an environment of low brand stickiness.
AI

6. AI in ecommerce — adoption is near-universal, ROI is not

73% of ecommerce brands have implemented AI; only 27% see meaningful ROI. The gap is execution. These numbers show where AI actually moves a marketplace metric — search, pricing, forecasting, recommendations.

  • 01
    The AI-enabled ecommerce market was $8.65 billion in 2025 and is expected to reach $22.6 billion by 2032, with 78% of organizations using AI in at least one business function.
  • 02
    AI chat is associated with conversion rates around 12.3% vs 3.1% without AI (roughly 4x higher), and shoppers complete purchases 47% faster with AI assistance.
  • 03
    Companies using AI personalization earn 40% more revenue than those without AI, a performance gap highly relevant for marketplace sellers.
  • 04
    Generative-AI traffic to US retail sites increased by 4,700% year over year, indicating a fundamental shift in how consumers discover products before visiting marketplaces.
  • 05
    AI in ecommerce tools are projected to reach nearly $51 billion by 2033, growing at about 24.3% CAGR.
  • 06
    About 51% of ecommerce businesses are already using AI to create smoother, more personalized shopping experiences.
  • 07
    AI-driven product recommendations are expected to boost ecommerce sales by around 59%, a pattern already visible in marketplace recommendation systems.
  • 08
    In 2026, 73% of ecommerce brands have implemented some form of AI, but only 27% see meaningful ROI, indicating execution quality — not just budget — determines outcomes.
  • 09
    Predictive product recommendations can lift average order value by about 35% when done properly.
  • 10
    AI-powered search (semantic/vector) can improve search-to-purchase conversion by around 40%, directly relevant to marketplace search engines.
  • 11
    Dynamic pricing algorithms can improve margins by 8–15% for brands with large SKU counts, a typical marketplace scenario.
  • 12
    AI-driven demand forecasting can reduce inventory carrying costs by 20–30%, vital for marketplace vendors balancing FBA/3PL and own inventory.
  • 13
    AI-powered personalization is central to B2C strategies; nearly half of marketers prioritize it for 2026.
  • 14
    Social commerce and AI-driven decision intelligence are converging, enabling marketplaces to adjust merchandising in real time based on engagement and inventory.
  • 15
    AI natural language processing is expected to surpass $112 billion by 2030, leading to more intelligent marketplace chatbots and search that understand intent.
  • 16
    AI is transforming sales and marketing by automating routine tasks, providing insights, and boosting customer experience at every stage of the commerce funnel.
  • 17
    By 2026, AI is expected to be deeply integrated into every stage of the sales process, from identification of prospects to relationship management and closing.
  • 18
    AI requires governance and data quality; poor data or opaque logic can undermine trust in marketplace recommendations.
  • 19
    Consumers increasingly judge brands and marketplaces by how well AI is implemented, not just whether AI is present.
  • 20
    The winning 2026 pattern is marketplaces and brands using AI for prediction, search, pricing, and personalization, while humans focus on brand, storytelling, and service.
Key Takeaways

What a smart operator does with these 120 numbers

Treat the marketplace listing as a storefront, not an afterthought. Half of shoppers research there first. A weak Amazon or Walmart listing loses the sale before your own site is ever in the running — even when the customer ultimately buys direct.

Build one funnel across social and marketplace. Social is the research layer; marketplaces are the conversion layer. Brands that measure and budget them separately see lower ROAS. Tracked links, consistent pricing, and matched creative are the fix.

Use email to control where volume lands. Email is the cross-channel glue — it can steer customers to whichever channel has the inventory and margin you need, drive review velocity for marketplace ranking, and reduce dependence on the algorithm.

Close the mobile gap before chasing more traffic. Mobile is the majority of marketplace volume but still converts below desktop. Listing optimization for mobile viewports and one-tap checkout is usually the highest-ROI quarter you can run.

Judge AI by ROI, not adoption. 73% have it; 27% see returns. The winners apply AI to specific marketplace metrics — search relevance, dynamic pricing, demand forecasting, recommendations — instead of treating it as a generic content tool.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How big is the ecommerce marketplace opportunity in 2026?

Global ecommerce sales are projected to exceed $8.1 trillion in 2026, with online channels representing about 24% of total retail. Marketplaces capture a large and growing share of that — roughly 49% of consumers now start product searches on marketplaces like Amazon rather than search engines. For operators, the takeaway is that marketplace presence is a discovery requirement, not just an incremental sales channel.

Should DTC brands sell on marketplaces or focus on their own site?

For most $5M–$50M DTC brands, it's not either/or. Marketplaces are where roughly half of shoppers begin product research, so even a site-first brand benefits from a strong marketplace presence for discovery and trust. The strategic question is channel orchestration: using email and pricing to steer volume toward whichever channel has the right inventory and margin, while maintaining consistent pricing and product information across all of them — 75% of consumers expect that consistency.

How does social commerce connect to marketplace sales?

Social platforms function as the research and discovery layer while marketplaces function as the conversion layer. Over 17% of online sales now route through social platforms, and a large share of younger shoppers discover products on TikTok or Instagram but complete the purchase on Amazon. Brands that fail to integrate the two — consistent pricing, tracked links, matched creative — see measurably lower ROAS. The 2026 best practice is planning social and marketplace budgets as one funnel.

What conversion lift can AI deliver for marketplace sellers?

The benchmark numbers are significant: AI chat is associated with conversion rates around 12.3% versus 3.1% without it, AI-powered semantic search can improve search-to-purchase conversion by roughly 40%, and predictive recommendations can lift AOV by about 35%. But adoption is far ahead of results — 73% of ecommerce brands have implemented AI while only 27% report meaningful ROI. Execution quality, not budget, is the differentiator.

What is the biggest mobile commerce challenge for marketplaces in 2026?

The persistent issue analysts call the "mobile gap": traffic skews heavily mobile while conversion still lags desktop. Mobile ecommerce is heading toward $2.74 trillion in 2026, and marketplaces dominate mobile app ecosystems, but many merchants still convert worse on mobile despite the traffic split. Closing it means optimizing listings for mobile viewports, enabling one-tap checkout, and supporting localized mobile payment options like wallets and BNPL.

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