Mobile Share of Traffic (E-commerce)

Mobile share of traffic shows what portion of visits to e-commerce sites comes from mobile devices. This page provides citable benchmark
reference points and segment breakdowns so you can compare like-for-like (market, device mix, and scope).

Back to the hub:
E-commerce Statistics.
For device context beyond visits, pair this with
mobile share of revenue
and funnel impact from
conversion rate (CR) benchmarks.

Metric: Mobile share of traffic
Silo: Mobile, UX & tech

Key benchmarks (quick reference)

Different sources use different panels and scopes (retail-only vs broad e-commerce, web-only vs combined).
Use one source consistently within a report, or present two sources side-by-side to show variance.

If you’re using traffic share to explain revenue performance, don’t stop at visits.
Add mobile revenue share and compare with
cart abandonment (mobile friction often shows up there).

Mobile traffic share by market (example benchmark points)

Market Mobile traffic share Scope How to use
Global 78% Retail e-commerce visits Headline benchmark for reports and “state of e-commerce” pieces.
United States 75% Retail e-commerce visits Market comparator if your store is US-focused.

Device mix (share of visitors to e-commerce sites)

Device Share of visitors Interpretation
Mobile 76.42% Baseline benchmark that often aligns with “~3/4+ of visits are mobile” narratives.
Desktop 22.58% Still material for higher-consideration purchases; pair with desktop conversion benchmarks when available.
Tablet ~1% Small share in many datasets; sometimes merged into “mobile” by tools and reports.

Recommended pairing:
traffic share → revenue share
funnel outcomes (CR,
abandonment).

How to interpret mobile traffic share

Short notes that are useful in research summaries and stakeholder decks.

  • Category matters. Lower-ticket and replenishment categories often skew more mobile; high-consideration can keep desktop meaningful.
  • Traffic intent matters. Social and top-of-funnel browsing tends to be more mobile-heavy than high-intent search.
  • Payments influence mobile completion. Local methods can reduce friction—see
    payment methods share
    and (Poland) BLIK share.
  • Traffic share ≠ revenue share. Always compare with
    mobile share of revenue.

Definition

Make sure “traffic” is defined consistently (visits/sessions) when comparing sources.

Sources

Primary sources for the benchmark values shown above.

Hub-wide pages:
Sources
Methodology
Glossary

Cite this page

Copy and paste (adjust date if needed).

Suggested citation (APA style):

Best for Ecommerce. (2026). Mobile share of traffic (e-commerce). Retrieved from
/ecommerce-statistics/mobile-ux-tech/mobile-share-of-traffic/

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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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