Mobile Share of Revenue (E-commerce)

Mobile share of revenue shows what portion of online revenue is generated on mobile devices. It’s one of the most cited “mobile commerce”
metrics because it often differs from mobile share of traffic, revealing a measurable conversion/checkout gap on mobile.

Back to the hub:
E-commerce Statistics.
Compare revenue share with
mobile share of traffic
and funnel impact from
cart abandonment rate
and conversion rate (CR) benchmarks.

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

Key benchmarks (quick reference)

Benchmarks depend on scope (retail-only vs broader e-commerce, web vs app, tracked panel size). Use one benchmark source consistently
within a report, or show two sources to communicate variance.

Use mobile revenue share as a “device outcomes” metric. For device inputs, reference
mobile share of traffic.
For funnel-level explanations, use
cart abandonment
and CR benchmarks.

Example benchmark gap (retail)

Metric Mobile share How to interpret
Traffic share 77% Mobile is where most browsing happens.
Revenue share 56.3% Mobile under-indexes vs its traffic share (conversion/checkout gap).
Gap 20.7 pp Often explained by checkout friction, payment method fit, or category/device mix.

How to use the gap in reporting

If your mobile traffic share is high but mobile revenue share lags, the next “why” pages to cite are:
cart abandonment rate (drop-offs),
payment methods share (method fit),
and delivery methods share (delivery expectations).

Breakdowns and segmentation ideas

Not every source publishes the same splits. Use the segmentation structure below to keep your own reporting consistent and comparable.

Recommended segment cuts (for “like-for-like” benchmarking)

  • Market / region: your main country vs global reference.
  • Category: high-ticket vs low-ticket categories (this can swing mobile revenue share substantially).
  • Device type: mobile vs desktop vs tablet (tablet is often small or merged into mobile).
  • Channel mix: paid social and top-of-funnel traffic can skew more mobile than high-intent search.
  • Checkout/payment mix: local methods can reduce mobile friction; see BLIK share (Poland).

If you report mobile revenue share, always report mobile traffic share next to it:
mobile share of traffic.

Definition

Make sure “revenue” and “mobile” scope are consistent (web vs app, gross vs net).

Sources

Primary sources used for the benchmark points shown on this page.

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 revenue (e-commerce). Retrieved from
/ecommerce-statistics/mobile-ux-tech/mobile-share-of-revenue/

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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