November, 18 2025
For years, e-commerce strategy has centered on one assumption: faster delivery equals higher conversion. Same-day, next-day, two-hour windows, retailers have poured money into shrinking delivery timelines to keep up with Amazon. But new research shows that speed is no longer the winning factor it once was. Customer priorities have shifted, and many brands haven’t caught up.
Delivery speed dominated customer expectations as recently as 2022. But by 2024, speed dropped to fifth place among delivery priorities. Today, 90% of consumers are willing to wait two to three days, and more than 80% will complete a purchase even with a 4–7 day delivery window, if shipping is free.
The data is consistent across studies:
Retailers heavily investing in ultra-fast delivery infrastructure may be solving a shrinking problem, while the real friction point is price transparency and perceived value.
Many retailers hesitate to show delivery dates because they fear slow estimates will drive customers away. It's a valid concern: if your typical delivery time is six days, showing that upfront can feel risky.
But A/B tests across multiple retail categories show a different pattern:
Why? Because customers outside major metros optimize for predictability and cost, not speed. They want to know when their package will arrive so they can plan accordingly.
The most important delivery attribute in 2025 isn't speed. It's confidence.
Studies show:
In many cases, a precise three-day estimate is more satisfying than an ambiguous “expedited” promise that could arrive in one or four days. Uncertainty, not transit time, is what drives anxiety, customer service tickets, and post-purchase churn.
Ultra-fast shipping comes with operational and environmental trade-offs:
As a result, many brands see higher margins by offering slower, free, or “green” shipping choices. A growing share of shoppers, around 25%, will even choose slower delivery if it leads to consolidated shipments or reduced environmental impact.
The most successful retailers are no longer treating delivery speed as a universal requirement. Instead, they focus on context, choice, and customer alignment.
A birthday gift and a household restock require different delivery promises. Urban shoppers may value speed; rural shoppers prioritize reliability and cost.
Show clear, accurate EDDs on product pages, in cart, and post-purchase. Transparency stabilizes conversion and reduces WISMO (“Where is my order?”) inquiries.
Let customers pick between:
Giving shoppers control often increases satisfaction more than shaving a day off transit time.
Delivery preferences vary dramatically by region, product category, income bracket, and time of year. What boosts conversion for one retailer, or one audience, may not work for another.
If free shipping has a threshold, explain why. If expedited shipping costs more, clarify the premium. Shoppers respect transparency and logic in pricing.
Speed still matters, but not everywhere, and not for everyone. Customers today prioritize reliability, transparency, and choice far more than raw velocity. They’ll wait longer for free shipping, sustainable options, and predictable delivery windows. But they won’t tolerate uncertainty.
Brands that win on delivery aren’t the ones trying to out-Amazon Amazon. They’re the ones that listen to their customers, invest in transparency, and build delivery experiences around real, not assumed needs.
References
Author: Akhilesh Srivastava
Founder and CEO of FenixCommerce