India's Food Delivery Sector Set for 19% CAGR Growth as Tier-2 Cities Drive Frequency

India's online food delivery market is projected to grow from USD 9.1 billion in 2024 to nearly USD 27 billion by 2030, driven by rising order frequency and tier-2 city adoption. The organized segment's market share is expanding rapidly, expected to reach 60-65% by 2030 from 47-52% currently. Despite growth, penetration remains low at 13% compared to 58-62% in the US and 42-46% in China. The next growth phase will focus on engagement rather than user acquisition, with monthly transacting user conversion expected to rise from 27% to 32% by 2029.

Key Points: India Food Delivery Market to Hit $27B by 2030

  • Market to grow from $9.1B to $27B by 2030 at 19% CAGR
  • Tier-2 cities account for 20-25% of market GOV
  • Monthly orders average 3-5 vs 8-10 in US
  • Organized segment share rising from 36-41% to 60-65% by 2030
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India's food delivery sector poised for double-digit growth as tier-2 adoption and frequency rise: Report

India's online food delivery market poised for double-digit growth driven by rising order frequency, tier-2 city adoption, and expanding organized segment, with penetration still low at 13%.

"The next leg of growth will be defined by engagement rather than user addition. - Investec Equities"

New Delhi, May 2

India's online food delivery market is entering its next growth phase, driven less by new user acquisition and more by rising order frequency, expanding Tier-2+ penetration and steady average order value expansion, according to Investec Equities.

The sector is expected to scale from USD 9.1 billion in 2024 to nearly USD 27 billion by 2030, growing at a 19 per cent CAGR, as digital adoption and urbanisation reshape consumption patterns.

The report stated that the broader food services market has grown from Rs 4 trillion in FY20 to Rs 7 trillion in FY25 and is projected to reach Rs 11-12 trillion by FY30, implying an 11-12 per cent Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR). Yet penetration remains low at 13 per cent of total food consumption, well below 58-62 per cent in the US and 42-46 per cent in China, reflecting India's strong preference for home-cooked meals and price sensitivity toward dining out.

However, structural shifts such as smaller households, longer working hours, urbanisation and migration away from family support systems are gradually increasing the frequency of eating out and ordering in.

Investec noted that the market share of the organised segment is expanding rapidly, rising from 36-41 per cent in FY20 to 47-52 per cent in FY25. It is expected to reach 60-65 per cent by FY30. At Rs 3.2-3.5 trillion in FY25, the organised market is projected to scale to Rs 6.6-7.8 trillion by FY30, led by branded restaurant chains, cloud kitchens and delivery-led formats that offer greater consistency and convenience. India also faces a meaningful supply gap in restaurant penetration per capita compared to global peers, leaving substantial headroom for organised players.

Within this, online food delivery remains the fastest-growing segment, expanding from Rs 270 billion in FY20 to Rs 790 billion in FY25 and expected to reach Rs 1.7-2.2 trillion by FY30 at a 17-23 per cent CAGR. Despite this, it still accounts for only 11 per cent of total food services, up from 3 per cent in 2018, indicating significant runway for further penetration.

Growth is being supported by convenience-led consumption, smartphone proliferation and improved supply density. On the demand side, nuclear households and younger working cohorts are accelerating the shift toward ordering in, while on the supply side, organised restaurant networks and logistics capabilities have improved assortment and delivery reliability.

The next leg of growth will be defined by engagement rather than user addition. The ecosystem had 85 million annual transacting users (ATUs) in 2024, with 27 per cent or 23 million converting into monthly transacting users (MTUs). This conversion is expected to rise to 32 per cent by 2029 as habit formation strengthens.

While metro and Tier-1 cities still contribute 75-80 per cent of market GOV, Tier-2+ cities already account for 20-25 per cent, showing the market is broadening beyond traditional urban centres. The user base is projected to reach 137 million by 2029.

Indian consumers currently average 3-5 monthly orders, compared to 8-10 in the US and 5-10 in China, underscoring the frequency gap that platforms can bridge as accessibility improves. AOVs are also rising, with Zomato's and Swiggy's expected to scale from Rs 282/Rs 407 in FY22 to Rs 461/Rs 463 in FY26E. Redseer projects industry AOV to reach Rs 542 by 2028 at a 6-8 per cent CAGR, supported by premium restaurant additions and broader cuisine availability.

With formalisation accelerating and penetration still low, Investec sees a long runway for organised, delivery-led players to gain share, making India one of the most compelling food delivery markets globally.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sneha F
The 3-5 orders vs 8-10 in US makes sense. We Indians still prefer home food, and honestly, our monthly spend on groceries is cheaper than ordering out even twice a week. But for late nights in corporate jobs, Zomato is a lifesaver. Good insights from Investec.
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James A
Interesting numbers. As someone who lived in China, the penetration gap is massive. India's home-cooking culture is beautiful but urbanization is clearly changing things. The platform conversion from 85M to 137M users by 2029 seems optimistic but possible given smartphone growth.
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Michael C
Respectfully, I wonder if the report underestimates Indian price sensitivity. ₹282 AOV on Zomato is okay for occasional orders, but less than 13% penetration suggests most people still cook. 19% CAGR sounds great on paper, but delivery economics need improving margins for platforms.
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Rohit L
Tier-2 growth is real! I'm in Lucknow and we now have 5-6 new cloud kitchens near my area. Earlier only Dominos was reliable, now options are increasing. But delivery charges still pinch - ₹40-50 extra per order adds up. Hope competition brings costs down. 💸
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Priya S
As a working mom, I use Swiggy 2-3 times a week for dinner when I'm too exhausted after office and school runs. The nuclear household point is spot on - my in-laws find it wasteful but for me, convenience is priceless. Healthier options would make it even better.
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