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Unfortunately, there is no single universal eCommerce conversion rate benchmark. The better answer is look at multiple sources and remember that these are all heavily dependant on your platform, industry, niche, price point, traffic source, device mix, average order value and purchase cycle.

Quick answer: what is the average eCommerce conversion rate in 2026?

At the time of this June 2026 update, IRP Commerce reports a 1.70% eCommerce conversion rate. Dynamic Yield’s global eCommerce benchmark was 2.66%. Shopify’s 2026 CRO guide cites a 2.96% Americas eCommerce benchmark from Dynamic Yield.

For Shopify stores specifically, Littledata reports a 1.4% average conversion rate, with stores above 3.2% in the top 20% and stores above 4.7% in the top 10%.

So, if you need a working benchmark, treat 2-3% as a broad eCommerce range, 3%+ as strong, and 4%+ as excellent for many Shopify stores. But always adjust for your industry, AOV, traffic source, customer type and device mix.

Sources: IRP Commerce, Dynamic Yield, Shopify and Littledata.

That does not mean these sources disagree, they just measure different datasets.

For example, Dynamic Yield’s global add-to-cart benchmark is 5.98%, while Littledata’s Shopify benchmark puts average add-to-cart rate at 4.6%. Littledata also reports average Shopify checkout completion at 45%.

These are different funnel stages, so they should not be mixed together as if they measure the same thing.

In short, most stores convert a small fraction of visits into sales.

And at Blend Commerce we often see stores outperform broad averages, but for us it's important that you do not chase to focus on headline conversion rate. It is finding the weakest growth metric or the biggest opportunity in the funnel and target that as your lever for growth.

2026 Shopify CRO Benchmarks

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Why are eCommerce Benchmarks Important?

Benchmarks reveal which parts of the funnel to target for growth. Below is a source-labelled TL;DR summary:

Benchmark Source Figure What it means
eCommerce conversion rate IRP Commerce, April 2026 1.70% Broad eCommerce market benchmark based on transactions divided by sessions.
eCommerce conversion rate Dynamic Yield, global benchmark 2.66% Cross-brand eCommerce benchmark across Dynamic Yield’s live 12-month benchmark dataset.
eCommerce conversion rate Shopify CRO guide citing Dynamic Yield, Americas 2.96% Americas eCommerce benchmark referenced by Shopify.
Shopify conversion rate Littledata Shopify benchmark 1.4% average; 3.2%+ top 20%; 4.7%+ top 10% Shopify-specific benchmark from Littledata’s eCommerce-site dataset.
Add-to-cart rate Dynamic Yield, global benchmark 5.98% Global product-page add-to-cart benchmark.
Add-to-cart rate Littledata Shopify benchmark 4.6% average; 7.5%+ top 20%; 9.6%+ top 10% Shopify-specific add-to-cart benchmark.
Checkout completion rate Littledata Shopify benchmark 45% average; 59%+ top 20%; 66%+ top 10% Shopify checkout-stage benchmark.
Cart abandonment rate Baymard Institute 70.22% Average documented cart abandonment rate across Baymard’s study set.
Cart abandonment rate Dynamic Yield, global benchmark 77.81% Cross-brand cart abandonment benchmark.

Sources: IRP Commerce April 2026 market data, Dynamic Yield eCommerce benchmarks, Shopify’s CRO guide, Littledata’s Shopify benchmark data and Baymard’s cart abandonment benchmark.

These figures frame your store's performance. While benchmarks don't guarantee "good" or "bad".

And at the risk of sounding like a stuck record, context matters.

But what they can show you, is where to look first.

Blend Commerce note: In our CRO work with Shopify brands, we treat benchmark data as a diagnostic starting point, not a target. A store with a decent add-to-cart rate but below average checkout completion has a different problem from a store with little to no product-page engagement. That is why we benchmark by funnel stage, not just sitewide conversion rate.

Below, we break down the funnel and emerging trends and share actionable tips for beating these benchmarks.

Don't forget that many metrics can influence your conversion rate. For example, if blog visitors make up 80% of your traffic and visits landing on blog pages have a low average conversion rate, your overall results will be affected.

Similarly, seasonal paid marketing campaigns focused on acquiring new visitors rather than driving sales can also impact your overall conversion performance. In these cases, when evaluating your performance against benchmarks, you may need to exclude certain traffic sources.

What Counts as a "Conversion" in 2026?

First, decide what "conversion" means for your store. Traditionally, eCommerce conversion rate = completed purchases ÷ sessions × 100.

The metric most eCommerce teams track is "what percentage of traffic buys". But you should also track micro-conversions. These are the steps that signal purchase intent, such as adding a product to cart, reaching checkout or signing up for a newsletter.

  • Primary conversion: Most benchmarks use orders divided by sessions. The exact denominator depends on the source.
  • Micro-conversions: Add-to-cart, checkout visits, email opt-ins, coupon claims and similar actions. These are leading indicators. We cover add-to-cart and checkout as part of the funnel below.

For clarity, when Blend talks about conversion rate in this article, we mean completed purchases unless stated otherwise. In practice, many eCommerce teams track both purchases and funnel steps. In 2026, you should too. Optimising an add-to-cart action, product page visit or checkout step can indirectly increase sales, but when comparing against an industry "average conversion rate", check whether the source is referring to purchases, checkout completion or another action.

Global & Shopify-wide Conversion Rate Averages

Global eCommerce benchmarks vary by source.

IRP Commerce reported a 1.70% eCommerce conversion rate in April 2026. Dynamic Yield’s global eCommerce benchmark was 2.66% at the time of this June 2026 update. Shopify’s 2026 CRO guide cites Dynamic Yield’s Americas eCommerce benchmark at 2.96%.

These figures are all useful, but they are not interchangeable. IRP is a market-data benchmark. Dynamic Yield is a cross-brand live benchmark. Shopify’s figure is an Americas eCommerce reference cited in a Shopify CRO guide. Treat them as source-labelled benchmarks, not one universal truth.

For Shopify stores, use Shopify-specific data where possible.

Littledata’s Shopify benchmark reports an average conversion rate of 1.4%, with stores above 3.2% in the top 20% and stores above 4.7% in the top 10%. Shopify’s own CRO guide also says that a store above 3% is among the best-converting online stores.

Blend’s interpretation: for established Shopify brands, 3%+ is strong and 4%+ is excellent, but only when judged against the store’s industry, AOV, traffic mix and customer type. A high-ticket furniture brand and a repeat-purchase beauty brand should not be judged against the same target.

Methodology note: We do not average these sources into one artificial “true” benchmark. IRP, Dynamic Yield, Shopify and Littledata use different datasets, time periods and definitions. IRP defines conversion rate as transactions divided by sessions. Shopify’s conversion-rate formula uses sessions that completed checkout divided by total sessions. Dynamic Yield’s benchmark uses completed purchases as a percentage of visitors. Littledata’s figures are Shopify-specific and based on eCommerce sites in its benchmark dataset.

For that reason, the tables below show source-labelled benchmarks. Use the source that most closely matches your store’s platform, category, market and funnel stage.

Benchmarks by Industry

Conversion rates vary widely by product category. It is far more meaningful to compare to your vertical than to the all-industry average. The table below does not blend sources. It shows source-labelled industry benchmarks so you can see how different datasets report different category performance.

Industry / category Dynamic Yield global benchmark Shopify CRO guide benchmark IRP April 2026 benchmark How to read it
Food & Beverage / Food & Drink 5.29% 6.00% 0.94% This category shows why source context matters. Food can convert very differently depending on market, basket size and traffic mix.
Beauty & Personal Care 4.71% 4.21% Not quoted as the same category Repeat-purchase categories often convert higher, but use the exact source category before setting a target.
Pet Care / Veterinary 4.34% Not quoted 2.81% Pet care tends to sit above many broad eCommerce averages in these datasets.
Multi-Brand Retail 3.28% 3.68% Not quoted Useful for retailers selling across many product types.
Fashion, Accessories & Apparel 2.81% 2.92% 1.41% Fashion benchmarks vary heavily by source, traffic quality and brand strength.
Consumer Goods 2.60% 2.86% Not quoted Use as a general consumer-goods reference, not as a precise Shopify target.
Home & Furniture 1.20% 1.32% Not quoted as the same category High-consideration and higher-AOV products often convert lower.
Kitchen & Home Appliances Not quoted as the same category Not quoted as the same category 2.72% Keep this separate from home furniture. Appliances and furniture are not the same buying journey.
Luxury & Jewellery 0.70% 0.90% Not quoted Luxury benchmarks are lower because shoppers usually take longer to decide.
Arts & Crafts Not quoted Not quoted 5.05% Source-specific IRP category. Do not merge this with broader retail averages.

Important: these are not blended averages. They are source-labelled benchmarks. If two sources show different figures for the same broad category, that does not make either source "wrong". It means the sample, market, time period and category definition are different.

High-AOV categories, such as luxury, tech and furniture, tend to convert lower, while repeat-purchase categories, such as beauty, consumables and fashion essentials, often convert higher. Use these as guides rather than law. A fashion store at 2% may be around average in one dataset, while a beauty store at 2% may have more obvious room to improve. Always benchmark against your specific niche.

eCommerce Benchmarks by Device

Device benchmarks are highly dataset-dependent.

At the time of this June 2026 update, Dynamic Yield’s global benchmark showed tablet conversion rate at 2.88%, mobile at 2.75% and desktop at 2.47%. Littledata’s Shopify-specific benchmark shows average mobile conversion rate at 1.2% and desktop conversion rate at 1.9%.

Bar chart comparing eCommerce conversion rate by device, showing Dynamic Yield benchmarks for tablet at 2.88 percent, mobile at 2.75 percent and desktop at 2.47 percent, plus Littledata Shopify benchmarks for mobile at 1.20 percent and desktop at 1.90 percent
Conversion rate by device, comparing Dynamic Yield’s global benchmark with Littledata’s Shopify-specific benchmark. Dynamic Yield reports tablet at 2.88%, mobile at 2.75% and desktop at 2.47%. Littledata reports Shopify mobile at 1.20% and desktop at 1.90%; no tablet figure was published.

Implication: the key takeaway is to benchmark your own mobile and desktop conversion rates separately in GA4, then segment by landing page, traffic source, returning customer rate and product category.

If your mobile conversion rate is lower than expected, review speed, product-page layout, thumb-friendly buttons, saved credentials, one-click payment, cart UX and checkout friction. Even small mobile improvements can have an outsized effect if mobile is a large share of your traffic.

Add-to-Cart & Checkout Completion Rates

Beyond purchase rate, the top of the funnel is also revealing. Add-to-cart rate and checkout completion rate are separate metrics, and they should not be treated as the same thing.

Dynamic Yield’s global add-to-cart benchmark is 5.98%. Its 12-month benchmark shows Food & Beverage with the highest add-to-cart rate at 10.43%, while Luxury & Jewellery is lowest at 1.72%.

For Shopify stores, Littledata reports an average add-to-cart rate of 4.6%, with stores above 7.5% in the top 20% and stores above 9.6% in the top 10%.

Checkout completion rate is the percentage of completed purchases divided by checkout initiations. Littledata reports average Shopify checkout completion rate at 45%, with stores above 59% in the top 20% and stores above 66% in the top 10%. KISSmetrics, states the typical checkout conversion rate is a range of 40-60% on desktop and 25-40% on mobile. Zuko’s eCommerce checkout form benchmark reports a 35.36% overall purchase form conversion rate, with 36.92% on desktop and 30.99% on mobile.

For cart abandonment, Baymard’s documented benchmark is 70.22%, while Dynamic Yield’s global cart abandonment benchmark is 77.81%. Use these as cart-stage benchmarks, not sitewide conversion-rate benchmarks.

The table below groups checkout completion benchmarks together because Littledata, KISSmetrics and Zuko are all helping diagnose the same part of the funnel: whether shoppers who begin checkout go on to complete the purchase.

Cart abandonment is shown separately because it represents leakage from the cart or checkout journey, not a positive funnel step.

Funnel stage / diagnostic metric Source Benchmark Use it to diagnose
1. Sitewide conversion rate IRP / Dynamic Yield / Shopify / Littledata 1.70% to 2.96% eCommerce-wide; 1.4% Shopify average in Littledata Overall commercial efficiency
2. Add-to-cart rate Dynamic Yield 5.98% global average Product-page and offer performance
Littledata Shopify benchmark 4.6% average; 7.5%+ top 20%; 9.6%+ top 10%
3. Checkout completion rate Littledata Shopify benchmark 45% average; 59%+ top 20%; 66%+ top 10% Checkout form friction
KISSmetrics 40-60% desktop; 25-40% mobile
Zuko 35.36% overall purchase form conversion rate; 36.92% desktop; 30.99% mobile
Cart abandonment rate
Cart-stage offshoot, not a funnel step
Baymard / Dynamic Yield 70.22% / 77.81% Cart-stage leakage

Note: Cart abandonment is shown separately because it represents shoppers who drop out of the funnel rather than a positive progression to the next funnel stage.

Visual ecommerce funnel infographic showing three diagnostic stages: sitewide conversion rate, add-to-cart rate and checkout completion rate, with cart abandonment shown as a separate offshoot for shoppers who drop out
Ecommerce funnel metrics benchmarks: use sitewide conversion rate to assess overall commercial efficiency, add-to-cart rate to diagnose product-page and offer strength, and checkout completion rate to diagnose checkout friction. Cart abandonment is shown as a separate offshoot because it represents shoppers who drop out of the cart or checkout journey, not a positive funnel step.

We dig into strategies for lifting both add-to-cart rate and checkout rates below. But the bottom line is: if add-to-cart is good but checkout completion is sub par, start with cart and checkout. If add-to-cart is low, start with product pages, collection pages, pricing clarity, imagery, reviews and delivery messaging.

Emerging 2026 Trends Impacting Conversion Rate

eCommerce never stands still. Key trends this year are reshaping how customers convert:

Major Shopping Events & Rising AOV

Adobe reported that U.S. retailers generated $24.1B in online spend from July 8-11, 2025, up 30.3% year on year and more than two Black Fridays. AP, citing Adobe Digital Insights, reported $7.9B in first-day U.S. online spending, up 9.9% year on year. Reuters also reported Adobe’s pre-event expectation that AI-assisted deal hunting and BNPL would influence Prime Day behaviour.

These shopping events matter because they can change conversion-rate behaviour. Discounts, urgency, AI-assisted deal hunting, mobile shopping and BNPL can all affect how shoppers move through the funnel during peak trading periods.

Payment Flexibility

Consumers expect easy, one-click payment options. Payment flexibility can reduce checkout friction, especially on mobile. Digital wallets, accelerated checkout options, PayPal, Shop Pay and BNPL all reduce the amount of work a shopper has to do before completing payment.

Mobile Shopify product page showing Shop Pay, Klarna and other payment options below the add-to-cart button
Example of accelerated checkout and flexible payment options on a mobile product page. Measure the impact by device, AOV and customer type before treating payment changes as a guaranteed CRO win.

Do not treat payment options as a magic fix, though. Measure their impact by device, AOV and customer type. A high-ticket store may see more impact from BNPL, while a lower-AOV repeat-purchase store may see more impact from saved payment details and faster mobile checkout. Shopify’s payment trends guidance is useful context here, but your own checkout data should decide what gets prioritised.

AI-Driven Personalisation

Generative AI and advanced algorithms are enabling more personalised shopping journeys. Search, ads and social feeds are already delivering AI-curated products and recommendations. Google highlights that with unpredictable consumer journeys, brands need to deliver content that speaks to a shopper’s interests.

In practice, personalised recommendations, dynamic merchandising, AI-assisted search and AI chatbots are becoming more common. Treat these as testable CRO levers, not guaranteed wins. The exact uplift varies by brand, traffic source, product type and how well the experience matches customer intent.

Site Speed & UX (Core Web Vitals)

Site speed still matters, but use sourced speed claims carefully.

A Google/Deloitte study found that a 0.1-second improvement in mobile site speed increased retail conversion rates by 8.4% and average order value by 9.2%. Treat this as a directional benchmark, not a guaranteed result. The impact of speed improvements depends on your theme, apps, scripts, product type and traffic mix.

Mobile site speed benchmark: a Google/Deloitte study found that a 0.1-second improvement in mobile site speed was linked to an 8.4% increase in retail conversion rate and a 9.2% increase in average order value. Treat this as a directional benchmark, not a guaranteed result for every Shopify store.

For Shopify stores, compress large images, reduce unnecessary scripts, avoid layout shifts, keep product pages lightweight and make mobile checkout as fast as possible.

Infographic showing page speed benchmarks where slower page load times are associated with lower ecommerce conversion rates
Page speed and conversion rate benchmark: this Blend-created visual shows a source-specific speed example where slower page load times are associated with lower ecommerce conversion rates: 2.4 seconds at 1.9%, 3.3 seconds at 1.5%, 4.2 seconds at below 1%, and 5.7+ seconds at below 0.6%. Use this as supporting context alongside your own Shopify speed, theme, app and mobile UX data.

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How to Beat the Benchmarks

Looking at the numbers tells you what to fix. But here’s how to fix it.

Step 1: Start with CRO Insights

Diagnose your store end-to-end. Blend’s CRO Insights examines traffic sources, analytics data, heatmaps and user flows to pinpoint leaks. We often use GA4 and session recordings with Microsoft Clarity to identify confusion, hesitation and slowdowns.

The result: a prioritised list of fixes. You get clarity on why your rates are what they are and what to change first.

Step 2: Personalisation & Testing

Tailor the experience and verify changes with experiments. Use message mining and personalisation to serve products, copy and offers that match each visitor’s intent.

For example, one Blend A/B test added a PayPal Express checkout button to the smart cart and saw conversion rate jump +37%. In another case, we revamped product page copy for a beauty brand using customer language with message mining and achieved a +25% conversion-rate lift.

You should aim to A/B test every major change, including headlines, images, CTAs, pricing displays and delivery messaging. What works on one site will not necessarily work on another, so let the data decide. Even failed tests teach you what customers respond to.

Step 3: Streamline Checkout

Remove friction in the final steps. Display trust signals, minimise form fields, pre-fill address information where possible and offer payment options such as Apple Pay, Google Pay, Shop Pay and PayPal Checkout.

Enabling Shop Pay Instalments or BNPL can help customers who hesitate at a high cart total. Shopify’s payment trends content gives useful context, but your own checkout data should decide whether BNPL, saved payment details or checkout UX is the better priority. Cart reminders and abandoned-cart emails are still worth having because cart-stage leakage is high across multiple benchmarks.

Step 4: Optimise Speed & Mobile UX

Mobile traffic is often a major share of eCommerce traffic, but mobile performance varies by store. Review mobile product pages, cart behaviour, checkout usability, payment options and site speed together rather than treating mobile conversion rate as one isolated number.

Use responsive design, thumb-friendly buttons, compressed images and lightweight product pages. Avoid unnecessary app scripts and layout shifts. Where possible, give shoppers faster ways to pay through accelerated checkout and saved credentials.

Step 5: Continuous Improvement

The benchmark is not a fixed target. Consumer behaviour changes, traffic quality shifts and product demand moves. Adopt an ongoing conversion rate optimisation mindset. Use tools like A/B testing platforms, including Intelligems, Convert and similar platforms, to iteratively refine your site.

Small UX tweaks add up over time. Tie every test back to revenue by focusing on changes that move orders, conversion rate, AOV, checkout completion and returning customer behaviour.

Bonus Tip

If sorting this list feels daunting, remember you do not have to go it alone. Blend Commerce specialises in Shopify CRO. See our CRO Insights process and case studies to learn how similar brands broke through their plateaus. Investing in expert CRO, even as a one-time audit, can reveal hidden wins and often pays for itself many times over.

Frequently Asked Questions

Question: What is a good Shopify conversion rate in 2026?

Answer: Shopify’s 2026 CRO guide says stores above 3% are among the best-converting online stores. Littledata’s Shopify benchmark reports a 1.4% average conversion rate, with stores above 3.2% in the top 20% and above 4.7% in the top 10%. For established Shopify brands, Blend treats 3%+ as strong and 4%+ as excellent, but only when judged against industry, AOV, traffic source and customer type.

Question: What is the average eCommerce conversion rate in 2026?

Answer: The safest answer is source-specific. IRP Commerce reports 1.70% for April 2026 eCommerce market data. Dynamic Yield’s global eCommerce benchmark was 2.66% at the time of this June 2026 update. Shopify’s 2026 CRO guide cites a 2.96% Americas eCommerce benchmark from Dynamic Yield. These figures differ because each source uses a different dataset, market and definition.

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Question: What is a good mobile eCommerce conversion rate?

Answer: Device benchmarks vary by dataset. Dynamic Yield’s global benchmark shows mobile conversion at 2.75%, desktop at 2.47% and tablet at 2.88%. Littledata’s Shopify benchmark shows mobile at 1.2% and desktop at 1.9%. Use these as references, then compare your own mobile and desktop conversion rates by source, landing page and customer type.

Question: What is a good add-to-cart rate?

Answer: Dynamic Yield’s global add-to-cart benchmark is 5.98%. Littledata’s Shopify benchmark reports a 4.6% average add-to-cart rate, with stores above 7.5% in the top 20% and above 9.6% in the top 10%. If your add-to-cart rate is weak, start with product-page clarity, offer strength, pricing, delivery information, reviews and mobile UX.

Question: What is a good checkout conversion rate?

Answer: Littledata reports average Shopify checkout completion at 45%, with stores above 59% in the top 20% and above 66% in the top 10%. KISSmetrics gives broader eCommerce checkout conversion ranges of 40-60% on desktop and 25-40% on mobile. If add-to-cart rate is healthy but checkout completion is weak, review shipping costs, payment options, trust signals, discount-code behaviour, form errors and account-creation friction.

Question: Why do eCommerce conversion rate benchmarks differ so much?

Answer: eCommerce benchmarks differ because each source uses a different sample, geography, time period and definition. IRP uses transactions divided by sessions. Shopify’s formula uses sessions that completed checkout divided by total sessions. Dynamic Yield calculates completed purchases as a percentage of visitors. This is why benchmarks should be source-labelled instead of blended into one universal average.

Question: How can I improve my store’s conversion rate?

Answer: Focus on reducing friction and building trust. Make sure your site is fast and easy to use. Use clear, benefit-driven copy and high-quality images. Use personalisation and A/B testing to tailor experiences, such as serving relevant products or testing different headlines. Offer convenient payments, including digital wallets and accelerated checkout options where appropriate. Finally, re-engage non-converters with retargeting and abandoned-cart emails. Small changes compound, so measure conversion rate, AOV, add-to-cart rate, checkout completion and drop-off rates, then double down on what works.

Finding Your Ideal Conversion Rate

Benchmarking your metrics is only half the battle. The real value comes from using these insights to take action. In 2026, the average Shopify store converts only a small percentage of its traffic, but by improving your funnel metrics, including add-to-cart, checkout completion, mobile UX and site speed, you can outperform broad benchmarks.

We also have in-depth case studies and a collection of A/B tests showing exactly how small tweaks drove double-digit conversion-rate improvements. And if you want to know where you are lacking and need a full report, we’ll give you one here.

Remember to use data, test relentlessly and apply the tactics above. In a year of AI and accelerated digital adoption, staying on top of your conversion funnel is more important than ever. For personalised guidance, consider scheduling a no-obligation call with us at Blend.

About the author

Peter Gardner

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Get in touch with the Shopify CRO experts at Blend Commerce

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Get in touch with the Shopify CRO experts at Blend Commerce

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