Desktop share of traffic measures the percentage of ecommerce website visits that come from desktop or laptop devices. It is an important benchmark because ecommerce traffic is often mobile-heavy, while desktop can still play an important role in research-heavy categories, B2B ecommerce, higher-value purchases and final checkout behavior.
Back to the hub:
E-commerce Statistics.
This dataset should be analyzed together with
mobile share of traffic,
mobile share of revenue,
conversion rate by device,
and average order value.
Key benchmarks (cite-ready)
Desktop traffic share depends strongly on whether the dataset measures all web traffic, retail traffic, ecommerce sessions, transactions or revenue. For ecommerce teams, retail-specific benchmarks are usually more useful than general web traffic benchmarks.
- Contentsquare reported that most retail site traffic in 2025 came from mobile devices, with desktop accounting for about 23%. Source
- StatCounter reported desktop at 45.61% of worldwide desktop/mobile/tablet web traffic in April 2026. Source
- StatCounter reported desktop at 46.35% when comparing only desktop vs mobile worldwide in April 2026. Source
Desktop share of traffic is usually lower in retail/ecommerce benchmarks than in general web traffic benchmarks. This is why ecommerce teams should separate “all web traffic” from “retail traffic” and from their own first-party analytics.
Desktop traffic context
Desktop traffic can look small in mobile-heavy ecommerce categories, but it may still be commercially important.
| Context | Benchmark / range | How to interpret |
|---|---|---|
| Retail site traffic | ~23% desktop | Mobile dominates traffic in many retail benchmarks, but desktop still matters for comparison, research and checkout. |
| Retail mobile traffic | ~77% mobile | Mobile is often the main discovery and browsing device for ecommerce customers. |
| Global web traffic: desktop/mobile/tablet | 45.61% desktop | Useful as a broad internet benchmark, but not specific enough for ecommerce decisions. |
| Global web traffic: desktop vs mobile only | 46.35% desktop | Desktop appears higher when tablet traffic is excluded from the comparison. |
| B2B ecommerce / complex purchases | Often higher than retail average | Desktop can be more important where users compare specifications, request quotes or make business purchases. |
A low desktop traffic share does not mean desktop UX should be ignored. Desktop users can represent higher-intent sessions, higher AOV orders, business buyers or customers completing a purchase after researching on mobile.
Segments that influence desktop share of traffic
Desktop traffic share becomes more useful when segmented by category, customer type, traffic source and funnel stage.
| Segment | What to measure | Why it matters | Pair with |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product category | Desktop share by category | Research-heavy categories may have more desktop sessions than impulse categories. | category mix |
| Customer type | Desktop traffic for new vs returning customers | Returning customers may use mobile for quick repeat purchases, while new customers may research on desktop. | repeat purchase rate |
| Order value | Desktop share by AOV band | Higher-value purchases may involve more desktop research and comparison. | AOV benchmarks |
| Traffic source | Desktop share by channel | Paid social may be mobile-heavy, while organic search, direct and B2B traffic can be more desktop-heavy. | organic search traffic share |
| Funnel stage | Desktop share by product view, cart, checkout and purchase | Desktop may have a different share at browsing stage than at purchase stage. | checkout completion rate |
| Revenue | Desktop share of revenue vs traffic | Desktop can have lower traffic share but higher revenue share in some stores. | mobile share of revenue |
Definition and calculation
Desktop share of traffic is usually calculated as the percentage of total website sessions or visits coming from desktop devices.
Desktop share of traffic is calculated as:
Desktop share of traffic = Desktop sessions ÷ Total sessions × 100
- Desktop usually includes laptop and desktop computer sessions.
- Some analytics tools separate desktop, mobile and tablet; others may group tablet differently.
- Compare desktop share of traffic with desktop share of revenue to understand commercial value by device.
- Segment desktop traffic by country, category, channel, customer type and funnel stage.
- Do not use global web traffic benchmarks as a direct replacement for first-party ecommerce analytics.
Reference pages:
Glossary •
Methodology
Sources
Primary and supporting sources used for desktop share of traffic benchmarks.
-
Contentsquare — retail digital experience benchmark guide, including retail mobile and desktop traffic share context.
https://contentsquare.com/guides/retail-digital-experience/ -
StatCounter Global Stats — desktop vs mobile vs tablet market share worldwide.
https://gs.statcounter.com/platform-market-share/desktop-mobile-tablet -
StatCounter Global Stats — desktop vs mobile market share worldwide.
https://gs.statcounter.com/platform-market-share/desktop-mobile/worldwide/ -
Contentsquare — Digital Experience Benchmark 2026, based on large-scale web and app session analysis.
https://go.contentsquare.com/en/digital-experience-benchmark
Cite this page
Copy and paste.
Best for Ecommerce. (2026).
E-commerce desktop share of traffic benchmarks.
Retrieved from
/ecommerce-statistics/mobile-ux-tech/desktop-share-of-traffic/
