Online Store Survival Rate

Online store survival rate measures what share of stores or e-commerce businesses remain active after one year, three years, five years or another cohort period. The key challenge is that official survival data is usually business-level, while e-commerce often operates through websites, marketplaces and multiple sales channels.

Back to the hub:
E-commerce Statistics.
This dataset belongs to
Market size & growth.
For related pressure metrics, compare this with e-commerce profitability benchmarks cash flow pressure benchmarks online store survival rate.

Metric type: survival / profitability pressure benchmark
Scope: e-commerce / online retail
Use case: risk, planning and investor context

Key benchmark signals

Use these reference points as directional benchmarks. Where e-commerce-only survival data is limited, compare official business survival data with commerce-specific operating pressure signals.

Official five-year marker
38.4%

ONS reports that UK businesses born in 2019 had a five-year survival rate of 38.4%.

Business birth rate
11.1%

ONS reports a UK business birth rate of 11.1% in 2024.

Business death rate
9.8%

ONS reports a UK business death rate of 9.8% in 2024.

Benchmark table

These ranges and signals should be interpreted by category, business model, maturity, geography, and acquisition channel mix.

Benchmark What it means How to use it
One-year survival Useful for checking early launch risk. Compare new-store survival with launch costs, inventory commitment and ad dependency.
Three-year survival Shows whether the store passed the initial novelty phase. Use for operational maturity and repeat purchase development.
Five-year survival A stronger measure of durable business viability. Use for investor context, business planning and market-risk comparisons.
Website survival Measures whether a store/domain remains live, not whether the business remains alive. Use carefully because a business may migrate platforms or domains.
Seller-account survival Applies to marketplaces but may not represent company survival. Use for Amazon, Etsy, eBay and marketplace-specific research only.
READ  E-commerce MER Benchmarks

How to read this benchmark

This is a pressure benchmark, not a single universal rule. Use it to compare risk, cash flow, profitability and operating maturity.

  1. Use a clear cohort. State the year the store/business started and the period measured.
  2. Separate survival from profitability. A store can survive while being unprofitable, and a profitable owner can close a store for strategic reasons.
  3. Compare by model. DTC, marketplace, dropshipping, subscription and retail-plus-online survival should not be mixed without context.

Avoid citing generic claims such as “90% of e-commerce stores fail” without a source, definition, geography and time window. Use official survival datasets where possible, then add e-commerce-specific context separately.

Segments and business-model differences

The same benchmark can mean different things for a bootstrapped Shopify store, a marketplace seller, a DTC brand, a retailer, or a cross-border merchant.

Dropshipping stores

Often have low setup friction but can churn quickly when ad costs rise or products become saturated.

Inventory-led brands

Higher startup capital and stock risk, but stronger survival if retention and margin work.

Subscription e-commerce

Survival depends heavily on churn, retention and customer lifetime value.

Cross-border stores

Survival is affected by localization, duties, returns, payment methods and delivery trust.

Definition

Online store survival rate is the percentage of stores or e-commerce businesses that remain active after a defined period.

Cohort survival tracks businesses launched in the same starting period.

Active store should be defined before use, for example accepting orders, filing accounts, keeping a website live, or maintaining marketplace activity.

Sources

Primary and reference sources used for this dataset page.

READ  Cart Abandonment Rate Benchmarks

Cite this dataset

Best For Ecommerce. “Online Store Survival Rate.” BestForEcommerce.com, 2026.

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

Recent Posts