Marketplace Share of E-commerce

Marketplace share of e-commerce measures how much online retail activity flows through marketplaces rather than direct-to-consumer, brand-owned or retailer-owned stores. This page summarizes benchmark signals for marketplace GMV, online sales share and strategic interpretation.

Back to the hub: E-commerce Statistics.
This page belongs to the Market Size & Growth silo. For market context, compare it with
global e-commerce market size,
e-commerce share of retail sales,
category mix in e-commerce sales,
gross margin benchmarks
and MER benchmarks.
Use this with cross-border share and traffic benchmarks to judge how much demand is controlled by marketplace ecosystems.

Metric: Marketplace share of ecommerce
Scope: Online marketplace GMV and ecommerce sales share
Updated: 2026-05-31
Category: Market size & growth

Benchmarks

Marketplace share of ecommerce: benchmark signals

Marketplace share can be reported as share of online sales, share of GMV or share of platform transactions. These are related but not identical metrics.

Forrester 2025 tracker
63.5% of online sales

Forrester’s 2025 global online marketplace tracker states that marketplaces account for 63.5% of all online sales across the tracked global marketplace universe.

Euromonitor 2024
62% of retail ecommerce

Euromonitor reported that online marketplaces achieved 62% of global retail ecommerce sales in 2024, reaching about $2.4 trillion.

3P seller signal
Third-party dominant

Euromonitor notes that third-party sales became a larger part of marketplace activity, which changes margin, inventory and retail media economics.

Marketplace table

Marketplace share benchmark definitions

Metric What it captures Benchmark caution
Marketplace share of online sales The portion of ecommerce sales occurring through marketplace platforms Depends on which marketplaces and countries are included.
Marketplace GMV Total value of transactions on marketplace platforms GMV is not the same as marketplace net revenue or commission revenue.
Third-party seller share The share of marketplace transactions from independent sellers Important for assortment, advertising, fulfillment and seller services.
Retailer marketplace share Hybrid retailers with both first-party and marketplace models A retailer can look like a store and a marketplace at the same time.
Category marketplace share Marketplace dependence by vertical Electronics, fashion, home, beauty and grocery can have different marketplace penetration.
READ  E-commerce Churn Rate Benchmarks

Segments

Where marketplace share matters most

Segment Marketplace role Strategic implication
Commodity products Marketplaces often dominate discovery Brands need price, review and content discipline to avoid margin erosion.
Niche products Marketplaces can validate demand A niche seller can use marketplaces for reach while building owned demand over time.
Cross-border goods Marketplaces reduce international discovery friction Sellers still need delivery, tax and returns clarity.
Premium brands Marketplace presence can be selective Control over pricing, brand experience and counterfeits may matter more than reach.
Retail media Marketplace sales and ad inventory reinforce each other Marketplace share affects advertising allocation, ROAS and incrementality measurement.

Usage

How to use marketplace share benchmarks

Use marketplace share to decide how much of your ecommerce strategy should rely on marketplace distribution versus owned-site growth. High marketplace share can signal strong demand access, but also higher price transparency, review pressure, fulfillment requirements and dependency risk.

Decision Benchmark to inspect Recommended interpretation
Should we launch on marketplaces? Category marketplace share and competitive density If buyers already search there, test with a controlled SKU set.
Should we invest in DTC? Marketplace dependence vs owned traffic growth DTC is more attractive when brand loyalty, repeat purchase and first-party data matter.
Is marketplace growth profitable? GMV, fees, ad spend and returns Do not compare marketplace GMV to owned-site net revenue without margin adjustments.
Should we use retail media? Marketplace sales share and ad incrementality High marketplace share often increases the importance of sponsored placements.

Methodology

Methodology note

Marketplace share of ecommerce is usually calculated as marketplace ecommerce sales or GMV divided by total ecommerce sales or GMV. Benchmarks differ depending on whether first-party retail, third-party marketplace GMV, services, digital goods, VAT, returns and cross-border sales are included.

READ  Pricing, Margins & Cross-border (E-commerce Statistics)

Sources

Sources and notes

Use these sources as directional benchmark references. Normalize by market definition, scope, currency, category mix, channel mix and measurement year before applying them to a specific store or investor model.

Cite this page

How to cite this dataset

Marketplace Share of E-commerce. Best For Ecommerce. Updated 2026-05-31. Available at: https://bestforecommerce.com/ecommerce-statistics/market-size-growth/marketplace-share-of-ecommerce/

Jakub Szulc

I am an active Ecommerce Manager and Consultant in several Online Stores. I have a solid background in Online Marketing, Sales Techniques, Brand Developing, and Product Managing. All this was tested and verified in my own business activities

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