, Australia
323 views
Photo by Ivan Samkov via Pexels

Australia's e-commerce revenue down 21% in February

Traffic declined 19% MoM.

Australia's e-commerce revenue fell 21% in February compared to January 2025 as the sector experienced its typical post-holiday slowdown, according to Pattern's latest report.

Traffic declined 19% month-on-month, whilst conversion rates dropped 5%, reflecting a pullback in consumer spending after the peak year-end shopping season.

Despite the short-term dip, year-on-year (YoY) data suggests the market remains on an upward trajectory.

February traffic rose 4% YoY, whilst revenue saw a modest 2% increase. However, the conversion rate edged down slightly from 1.62% to 1.60%, and the average order value (AOV) slipped 1% to $161.

Analysts noted that whilst spending softened, the rise in traffic indicates sustained consumer interest in online shopping, suggesting that the sector continues to expand even as conversion rates and AOV face minor pressures.

 

Join Retail Asia community
Since you're here...

...there are many ways you can work with us to advertise your company and connect to your customers. Our team can help you design and create an advertising campaign, in print and digital, on this website and in print magazine.

We can also organize a real life or digital event for you and find thought leader speakers as well as industry leaders, who could be your potential partners, to join the event. We also run some awards programmes which give you an opportunity to be recognized for your achievements during the year and you can join this as a participant or a sponsor.

Let us help you drive your business forward with a good partnership!

Top News

MINISO Land opens first flagship store in Australia
MINISO Land Sydney offers 7,000 SKUs with 70% of products being IP collaborations.
Stores
Asia Pacific set to become the world’s largest engine of consumer demand
Bain and NIQ say companies need to re-prioritise markets and redefine consumer value beyond price.
Singapore consumers show rising openness to agentic AI shopping
By 2030, consumers expect about 10% of their online purchases to be made through AI agents. 
Global fashion executives expect tougher 2026 as growth stays muted
Brands are expected to build GEO capabilities to optimise for generative engines and prepare for agentic commerce.