Key Takeaways:
- Indian e-commerce growth recorded a 13.5% rise in order volumes and a 21% increase in average order value.
- Prepaid orders climbed to 41% in 2025 with metros at 46% and rapid gains in Tier II and Tier III cities.
- Delivery speeds and reliability improved particularly in Tier III markets with on-time delivery rates up and returns down.
- Shoppers showed more habitual purchasing patterns and spending, signalling stronger consumer trust in online channels.
Indian E‑commerce Growth Accelerates as Prepaid Orders Reach 41%
India’s online retail sector strengthened in 2025 with steadier demand, faster deliveries outside major cities and growing consumer confidence, according to an industry analysis of logistics data. The study examined 635.22 million orders processed between January 2024 and November 2025 and found order volumes rose 13.5 percent year on year while average order values increased 21 percent.
Indian e-commerce growth drives prepaid adoption
The share of prepaid orders climbed to 41 percent in 2025 from 32 percent a year earlier, a shift that signals higher trust in payment and delivery systems across regions. Metro areas recorded the highest prepaid adoption at 46 percent, while Tier II cities expanded rapidly to 40 percent. Even Tier III markets where cash on delivery traditionally dominated saw prepaid orders reach 34.5 percent.
Analysts noted that the move towards prepaid payments coincided with a rise in average order values, suggesting customers were more willing to pay upfront when delivery outcomes became more predictable. That predictability was reflected in improved reliability metrics and fewer returns.
Improved delivery performance beyond major cities
Delivery times shortened most markedly outside metros. Tier III deliveries became nearly 29 percent faster year on year. By comparison Tier I markets saw a 7.1 percent improvement. Together Tier II and Tier III regions accounted for more than half of all orders, reducing the service gap between metros and smaller towns and widening the addressable market for retailers and logistics firms.
On time delivery rates rose to 36 percent in 2025 from 28 percent in 2024. Delivery related issues fell by around four percentage points and return rates dropped from about 29 percent to under 22 percent. The most common reasons for returns remained change of mind, sizing and fit problems, and items not matching descriptions.
Shifts in shopping habits and policy influence
The data pointed to a gradual normalisation of online shopping into everyday life rather than heavy reliance on flash sale events. Mondays emerged as the largest day for average order volumes, indicating habit driven consumption. Festive demand was estimated to be 23 to 25 percent higher than the previous year, providing an additional boost to volumes.
Market observers also attributed part of the demand uptick to the rollout of GST 2.0 on 22 September, which reduced tax rates on electronics, appliances and fashion. Lower effective prices combined with more reliable delivery services appear to have encouraged higher upfront spending.
While the ClickPost analysis covers only a portion of India’s online market it offers a comprehensive snapshot across categories and geographies. Taken together the figures suggest Indian e-commerce growth in 2025 was not only about scale but also about predictability. Faster deliveries fewer returns and higher prepaid adoption point to a more stable and trusted system that should support further expansion of digital commerce in the years ahead.

















