1. Introduction: The Rise—and Price—of Speed
Quick commerce—ultra-fast grocery delivery, typically within 10 minutes—has captured consumer imagination and urban market share. Platforms like Swiggy Instamart, Zomato-owned Blinkit, and Zepto promise unmatched convenience. But behind the promise lies a harsh truth: rapid delivery comes with steep financial and operational costs. While consumer traction is soaring, the business models remain under immense strain.
2. Swiggy Instamart: Growth Amid Losses
Swiggy’s Instamart saw explosive growth in the last quarters. In Q4 FY25, revenue surged—but the consolidated net loss doubled to ₹1,081 crore compared to the previous year.
The loss continued rising: Q1 FY26 saw net losses of ₹1,197 crore (≈ ₹11.97 billion), driven by a staggering 60% jump in expenses. Revenue rose 52% year-on-year.
3. Eroding Margins and Mounting Costs
Instamart’s contribution margin deteriorated from –1.9% in Q2 to –4.6% in Q3, influenced by aggressive marketing, expansion of dark stores, and high user acquisition costs. Adjusted EBITDA slipped to –14.8%.
Despite doubling gross order value and expanding its dark-store network, per-store productivity declined—daily orders fell 22%, and GoV per square foot dropped up to 32%.
4. Long Road to Profitability
Analysts remain skeptical of quick turnarounds. Elara Capital flagged that Instamart may only reach operational profitability by around Q2 FY27—and that depends heavily on boosting Average Order Value (AOV).
5. Zepto’s Red Flags
Zepto, despite rapid expansion and unicorn status, is not without challenges. It faces criticism for questionable app practices—like hidden charges and dark patterns—and issues with inconsistent delivery quality.
6. Operational Hurdles & Customer Frustration
Fast delivery comes at operational costs. Users report experiences like spoiled or underweight items, and frustrating resolution systems that drag on indefinitely.
7. Competitive Pressures
Swiggy’s aggressive push to expand—increasing prepaid dark stores rapidly—faced pushback from rivals like Blinkit, which maintains superior margins and better unit economics. Blinkit’s GOV in Q2 FY25 was significantly higher than Instamart’s, and it achieved contribution positive earlier.
8. Business Model Under Stress
Quick commerce relies heavily on infrastructure—dark stores, delivery fleets, tech stack—combined with customer incentives. But low margins, high burn, and consumer resistance to delivery fees raise sustainability concerns.
9. The Path Forward: What’s Needed
For quick commerce to evolve sustainably, platforms must:
- Improve unit economics through higher AOV and order density
- Establish optimized expansion strategy (not just rapid scale-up)
- Reduce dependence on heavy discounts, while preserving customer satisfaction
- Prioritize quality and resolution effectiveness to retain trust
- Offer transparent pricing and avoid deceptive practices
10. Conclusion: A Volatile but Vital Sector
Quick commerce is reshaping India’s retail with unmatched convenience—but at a high cost. Swiggy Instamart, despite fast expansion, bleeds cash. Zepto garners attention but faces reputational risk. Long-term, the sector must transition from discount-driven growth to a value-based, efficient, and customer-centric model. Otherwise, this rapid-delivery dream risks crashing into financial reality.