Ecommerce Data
Abandoned Cart Statistics:
What the Data Reveals (2026)
Cart abandonment is costing UK ecommerce businesses billions annually. We've analysed 50+ sources and proprietary data from Google Ads campaigns to compile the most comprehensive abandoned cart statistics available. Here's what the numbers show — and how to recover the sales you're losing.
70.2%
Average cart abandonment rate
£6.4B
Annual UK revenue lost to abandonment
15%
Typical recovery rate from emails
What Is Cart Abandonment?
Cart abandonment occurs when a customer adds items to their shopping basket, initiates the checkout process, but leaves the website without completing the purchase. It's one of the most expensive problems in ecommerce — and one of the most solvable.
Unlike a customer who never visits your site, an abandoned cart customer has already made a purchasing decision. They've identified your products, added them to their basket, and are ready to buy. The only barrier is friction in the checkout process, concerns about cost, trust, or an unexpected distraction.
This is what makes abandoned cart recovery so valuable: these aren't cold prospects. These are warm, qualified buyers who simply need a nudge to convert.
Abandoned cart — Items left in the basket before checkout begins
Abandoned checkout — Items left during the checkout process
Cart abandonment rate — The percentage of sessions with a cart but no completed purchase
The Abandonment Rate: 70.2% (2026 Data)
The average cart abandonment rate across all industries is 70.2% — meaning nearly 3 out of 4 customers who put items in their basket leave without buying. This figure is based on aggregated data from 2025–2026 across millions of ecommerce transactions globally.
70.2% of all shopping carts are abandoned. This isn't a niche problem. It's the default outcome of most ecommerce sessions. For every £100 in products that make it to checkout, approximately £234 in products are abandoned.
£100K
Revenue generated
£234K
Abandoned (unrealised)
£35.1K
Recovery at 15%
£70.2K
Recovery at 30%
The abandonment rate has been creeping upward over the past five years. In 2015, the average was 68.8%. By 2020, it had risen to 69.5%. Today, it's 70.2%. This increase is driven by:
- Increased mobile traffic — Mobile abandonment rates are higher than desktop
- Higher expectations — Customers expect faster checkout, free shipping, multiple payment options
- Cart as research tool — Customers add items to compare prices across sites
- Complexity — More fields in checkout, more unexpected fees at the final step
The good news: abandonment rates are rising, but recovery strategies have improved dramatically. Businesses using multi-touch recovery campaigns (email + SMS + retargeting) are recovering 25–35% of abandoned carts — up from 10–12% five years ago.
Cart Abandonment by Device Type
Device type is one of the strongest predictors of whether a cart will be abandoned. The data is stark:
| Device Type | Abandonment Rate | Recovery Difficulty | Primary Friction Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile | 85.2% | High | Small screen, auto-fill issues, payment dropdown |
| Tablet | 74.6% | Medium | Fewer native apps, unfamiliar UX |
| Desktop | 59.3% | Low | Better form usability, established patterns |
Sources: Baymard Institute (2025), SaleCycle (2025), Littledata (2026)
Key Insights
- Mobile is the abandonment crisis point. A 25-point gap separates mobile (85.2%) from desktop (59.3%). Customer expectations for mobile checkout have increased faster than sites have optimised.
- Forms are the primary culprit on mobile. Auto-fill failures and manual credit card entry are the #1 reason. Sites with 3+ one-click payment options see 12–18% lower mobile abandonment.
- Tablet is a forgotten middle ground. Most sites optimise for mobile and desktop, leaving tablet checkout as an afterthought.
- Desktop still has friction. Even at 59.3%, unexpected shipping costs, trust concerns, and lack of payment methods drive abandonment.
Improvement Potential by Device
| Intervention | Mobile Impact | Tablet Impact | Desktop Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| One-click payment methods | −8 to −15% | −4 to −8% | −2 to −4% |
| Guest checkout option | −5 to −10% | −3 to −6% | −2 to −4% |
| Show shipping cost upfront | −7 to −12% | −4 to −8% | −3 to −6% |
| Auto-fill enabled | −4 to −8% | −2 to −4% | −1 to −2% |
| Optimized form fields | −6 to −10% | −3 to −6% | −1 to −3% |
Cart Abandonment by Industry
Cart abandonment rates vary dramatically by industry. A 40% abandonment rate in luxury goods is exceptional; the same rate in fast fashion is a crisis.
| Industry | Avg. Abandonment Rate | Avg. Order Value | Recovery Difficulty | Primary Friction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luxury Goods | 38% | £850+ | Low | Payment security |
| Electronics | 52% | £320 | Low–Medium | Price comparison |
| Fashion/Apparel | 68% | £65 | Medium | Size/fit uncertainty |
| Office & Supplies | 68% | £180 | Medium | B2B procurement |
| Home & Garden | 71% | £140 | Medium | Shipping cost surprises |
| Beauty & Cosmetics | 74% | £55 | Medium–High | Loyalty/subscription friction |
| Books & Media | 74% | £18 | Medium–High | Low order value |
| Sports & Outdoors | 76% | £120 | Medium–High | Abandoned browsing |
| Toys & Games | 78% | £35 | High | Impulse purchase category |
| Pet Supplies | 79% | £60 | Medium–High | Subscription/recurring |
| Grocery & Food | 81% | £45 | High | Delivery windows |
| Furniture | 82% | £650 | High | Delivery logistics |
Sources: Baymard Institute (2025), SaleCycle (2025), Littledata (2026), Visionary Marketing proprietary data
Key Industry Insights
- Luxury goods have the lowest abandonment (38%) — Customers who can afford high-value items are serious buyers. Friction is around payment security, not price sensitivity.
- Fashion has moderate-to-high abandonment (68%) — Size/fit uncertainty is the primary culprit. Solution: detailed size charts and free returns messaging.
- Grocery & food has the highest (81%) — Inflexible delivery windows, perishability concerns, and low AOV make shipping costs feel excessive.
- Furniture is a close second (82%) — High order values and complex delivery logistics create anxiety.
The pattern: Higher order values correlate with lower abandonment rates. Luxury goods (£850+ AOV) = 38% abandonment. Toys (£35 AOV) = 78%. Customers are more willing to follow through when the purchase feels intentional and high-stakes.
Top Reasons Shoppers Abandon Carts (12+ Reasons)
Abandoned carts fail for specific, measurable reasons. Understanding these reasons is the key to recovery.
Sources: Baymard Institute (2025), Littledata (2025), SaleCycle (2025), Blue Yonder (2026). Percentages sum to >100% as customers cite multiple reasons.
Detailed Breakdown of Top Reasons
#1: Unexpected Shipping Costs (48%)
Nearly half of all abandonments are driven by shipping costs discovered at the final step. The fix: show estimated shipping costs immediately after the first item is added. Sites displaying costs before checkout see 12–18% lower abandonment.
#2: Complexity of Checkout Process (37%)
Checkout should be a one-page flow. Every additional field increases abandonment by 3–5%. Checkout pages with 4 or fewer fields have 22% lower abandonment than those with 8+.
#3: Comparison Shopping (26%)
Customers leave to check competitor prices. This is low-severity — retargeting campaigns targeting comparison shoppers achieve 8–12% conversion rates (vs 2–3% for cold traffic).
#4: Lack of Payment Options (22%)
Offer at least three payment methods. Sites with 3+ options see 20% lower abandonment. One-click payments convert 15–25% better than traditional card entry.
#5: Security/Trust Concerns (19%)
Adding a security badge to the payment page reduces abandonment by 5–8%. Clear return policies and professional design are critical.
The top 3 reasons account for 48% + 37% + 26% = 111% of abandonment instances. Addressing just these three (shipping cost transparency, checkout simplification, and payment method variety) would reduce overall abandonment by 30+ percentage points for most businesses.
Abandonment by Time of Day and Day of Week
Abandonment rates fluctuate based on when customers shop. This data is useful for timing recovery campaigns.
Abandonment by Day of Week
Sources: Littledata (2025), BrightEdge (2026)
Key Insights
- Friday evenings have the highest conversion rates (lowest abandonment at 64%). The "golden hour" for ecommerce is Friday 6–9 PM.
- Tuesday–Thursday mornings have the highest abandonment (72–74%). Customers are at work and distracted.
- Recovery email timing: Send 24–36 hours after abandonment. Most customers check email during Tuesday–Thursday work hours.
- SMS recovery: Most effective within 4 hours, during high-conversion windows (Friday evening, Wednesday afternoon).
Cart Recovery Statistics (Email, Retargeting, SMS)
Recovery campaigns are where the real value lies. These numbers show what's actually working.
| Recovery Channel | Typical Rate | Avg. Rate | Open Rate | Click Rate | Best Practice |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8–15% | 10.2% | 18–22% | 2–4% | Multi-touch (3–5 emails) | |
| SMS | 6–12% | 8.7% | N/A | Varies | Single urgent message within 4 hrs |
| Display Retargeting | 4–8% | 5.2% | N/A | CTR 0.5–1.2% | Sequential messaging |
| Push Notifications | 3–7% | 4.1% | 15–20% | 1–2% | Mobile apps only |
| Combined (All) | 20–35% | 25.4% | N/A | N/A | Highest recovery rate |
Sources: Klaviyo (2025), Campaign Monitor (2025), Littledata (2026), Optinmonster (2025)
Email Sequence Performance
| Email Sequence | Recovery Rate | Best Practice |
|---|---|---|
| 1 email (single send) | 4.2% | No |
| 2 emails (24 + 72 hrs) | 7.1% | Minimum viable |
| 3 emails (4 + 24 + 72 hrs) | 10.2% | Standard best practice |
| 4 emails (4 + 24 + 72 + 168 hrs) | 12.8% | Effective |
| 5+ emails | 12.8% (plateau) | Diminishing returns |
Key Recovery Insights
- Email is the foundation. 10.2% average recovery means 10 of every 100 abandoned carts convert via email.
- Multi-email sequences outperform single emails. A single email recovers 4–6%; 3–5 emails recover 10–15%.
- The "4-hour rule" is critical: send the first email within 4 hours. After 48 hours, recovery drops 30–40%.
- Combined approach achieves 20–35% recovery. Email reminds them, SMS provides urgency, retargeting keeps you top-of-mind.
Abandoned Cart Email Performance Benchmarks
Email is the primary recovery channel. Here are detailed benchmarks.
| Metric | Industry Average | Top Quartile | Bottom Quartile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Email 1 Open Rate | 20.1% | 28–35% | 10–15% |
| Email 1 Click Rate | 2.8% | 4–6% | 0.5–1% |
| Email 1 Conversion Rate | 4.1% | 6–8% | 1–2% |
| Email 2 Open Rate | 14.2% | 20–25% | 7–10% |
| Email 2 Click Rate | 1.9% | 3–4% | 0.3–0.8% |
| Email 2 Conversion Rate | 2.8% | 4–5% | 0.5–1.5% |
| Email 3 Open Rate | 8.4% | 12–16% | 4–6% |
| Email 3 Click Rate | 1.1% | 2–3% | 0.2–0.5% |
| Email 3 Conversion Rate | 1.6% | 2–3% | 0.3–0.8% |
| Unsubscribe Rate (3-email) | 0.8% | 0.2–0.5% | 2–4% |
Sources: Klaviyo (2025), Campaign Monitor (2025), Mailchimp (2025)
Subject Line Performance
| Subject Line Type | Open Rate | Conversion Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Generic ('We noticed you left something behind') | 14% | 2.8% |
| Name mention ('Sarah, you left something') | 19% | 3.2% |
| Product-specific ('Your blue running shoes…') | 26% | 4.1% |
| Urgency-based ('Only 2 items left in stock') | 23% | 3.9% |
| Benefit-based ('Complete your order and save £15') | 28% | 4.8% |
| Emoji-based ('👋 Sarah, come back!') | 18% | 3.0% |
Critical Benchmarks
- Email 1 (within 4 hours) is the workhorse — it accounts for 60% of total recovered revenue from the sequence.
- Personalisation is critical. Emails showing exact abandoned products have 20–40% higher open rates.
- A 10% incentive increases Email 1 conversion from 4.1% to 6–8%. Above 20% causes incentive fatigue.
- Product-specific subject lines see 25–35% higher open rates than generic ones.
Optimal Email Sequence Timing
Email 1: 1–4 hours
Recovers 4.1% — highest intent period
Email 2: 24 hours
Recovers 2.8% — time to think
Email 3: 72 hours
Recovers 1.6% — final reminder
Abandoned Cart Revenue Impact Calculator
Abandoned Cart Revenue Impact Calculator
Estimate how much revenue you could recover.
Revenue Lost Annually
£1,400,000
Current Recovery (Annual)
£70,000
Potential Recovery (Annual)
£280,000
Additional Revenue (12mo)
£210,000
Monthly Revenue Lift
£17,500
Estimated ROI
3,500%
This calculator estimates revenue impact based on industry averages. Actual results depend on your specific product, audience, and recovery strategy. Recovery improvement cost assumes £500/month.
Seasonal & Holiday Abandonment Trends
Abandonment patterns shift dramatically during holidays and peak shopping seasons.
Sources: Littledata (2025), Shopify (2025), SaleCycle (2026)
Holiday Abandonment by Industry
| Holiday/Period | Fashion | Electronics | Home & Garden | Toys | Beauty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black Friday/Cyber Monday | 45% | 48% | 52% | 42% | 50% |
| Christmas (Dec 1–24) | 61% | 55% | 68% | 48% | 62% |
| Boxing Day (Dec 26–Jan 15) | 78% | 72% | 82% | 71% | 75% |
| Mother's Day (March) | 58% | 62% | 52% | 65% | 48% |
| Father's Day (June) | 64% | 58% | 56% | 70% | 71% |
Key Insights
- June–July sees peak abandonment (75%) — customers are distracted by summer holidays.
- November–December sees lowest abandonment (52–58%) — deadline motivation (Christmas) and special offers drive conversion.
- The "Black Friday Effect" — abandonment drops 18–20 percentage points vs regular periods.
- Occasion-driven shopping reduces abandonment significantly because customers have deadline motivation.
Checkout Optimisation Statistics
Cart abandonment is fundamentally about checkout friction. Here's what optimisations actually work.
| Optimisation | Abandonment Reduction | Difficulty | ROI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Show shipping cost before checkout | −12% | Easy | High |
| Enable guest checkout | −10% | Medium | High |
| Reduce form fields to ≤5 | −8% | Medium | High |
| Add security badges/trust signals | −5% | Easy | High |
| One-click payment (Apple/Google Pay) | −8% | Medium | High |
| Auto-fill enabled (proper HTML) | −6% | Easy | High |
| Progress indicator in checkout | −4% | Easy | Medium |
| Clear return policy messaging | −5% | Easy | Medium |
| Live chat during checkout | −7% | Hard | High |
| Mobile-optimized checkout | −15% | Hard | High |
| Reduce checkout steps (3→1) | −12% | Hard | Very High |
| Exit-intent pop-up with incentive | −3% | Easy | Low |
| Post-purchase email confirmation | −2% | Easy | Low |
Sources: Baymard Institute (2025), Unbounce (2025), Shopify (2026)
Prioritisation Matrix
✅ High Impact / Low Effort (Do First)
- • Show shipping cost upfront
- • Enable guest checkout
- • Add trust signals
- • Auto-fill enabled
🔷 High Impact / High Effort (Do Next)
- • Mobile-optimise checkout
- • Reduce checkout steps
- • One-click payments
Spend 80% of your effort on the top 4 initiatives above — they deliver 80% of abandonment reduction.
Geographic & International Cart Abandonment
Abandonment rates vary significantly by geography, driven by payment preferences, currency trust, and shipping complexity.
UK Regional Abandonment
| UK Region | Abandonment Rate | Primary Friction | Avg. Order Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| London | 64% | Competitive market | £145 |
| South East | 68% | Shipping costs | £120 |
| Scotland | 69% | Shipping costs | £115 |
| West Midlands | 70% | Shipping delays | £105 |
| South West | 71% | Limited payment options | £95 |
| East Midlands | 72% | Trust concerns | £110 |
| North West | 73% | Payment methods | £88 |
| Wales | 74% | Delivery options | £92 |
| North East | 75% | Limited selection | £82 |
| Northern Ireland | 76% | International fees | £78 |
Sources: Littledata (2025), Visionary Marketing proprietary data (2026)
International Abandonment Rates
| Country | Abandonment Rate | Primary Barrier |
|---|---|---|
| Japan | 68% | High trust, lower abandonment |
| UK | 70% | Shipping cost, form complexity |
| Canada | 71% | Similar to UK |
| USA | 72% | Similar to UK |
| Germany | 73% | Privacy concerns, payment methods |
| Australia | 75% | High shipping costs, currency |
| France | 77% | Language, currency concerns |
| Spain | 79% | Language, limited payment options |
| Italy | 81% | Limited payment options, currency |
| India | 84% | Payment method limitations |
Sources: Baymard International Study (2025), eShopWorld (2026)
Key Insights
- Non-English-speaking countries see 7–12% higher abandonment — offering local languages decreases abandonment by 8–10%.
- Local payment methods matter. Supporting local methods reduces abandonment by 5–8%.
- Northern UK regions see higher abandonment due to slower/more expensive shipping.
- Currency display matters. Showing local currency reduces abandonment by 3–5% in non-UK markets.
Methodology
Transparency matters. Here's how we compiled the data:
- Core statistics are aggregated from Baymard Institute's Cart Abandonment Study (2025), SaleCycle's Benchmark Report (2025), and Littledata's Shopify analysis (2025–2026).
- Device-level data comes from Baymard's device-specific research, Google Analytics aggregate data, and Shopify transaction logs.
- Industry breakdown combines Baymard's 12-industry analysis, Littledata's benchmarks, and proprietary data from 30+ active Google Ads remarketing campaigns.
- Recovery rate data is sourced from Klaviyo (2025), Campaign Monitor, Mailchimp, and direct client reporting.
- Email benchmarks come from Klaviyo, Campaign Monitor, Mailchimp, and ConvertKit ecommerce benchmarks, reflecting millions of emails in 2025–2026.
- Checkout optimisation statistics are from Baymard Institute CRO research, Unbounce, and Shopify internal research.
- Geographic data is sourced from Littledata's regional analysis, Baymard's international study, and eShopWorld (2025–2026).
- Seasonal trends are based on Littledata, Shopify holiday reports, and Google Ads campaign performance.
All data is current as of March 2026. We update this article quarterly. If you spot outdated data, contact us at chris@visionary-marketing.co.uk.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Cart abandonment is costing you tens of thousands every month. At Visionary Marketing, we use real-time performance data to build Google Ads retargeting and email recovery campaigns that turn abandoned sessions into completed purchases.
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