Why Indian D2C Brands Are Bleeding Margin on Marketplaces — And What to Do About It

By the StoreDad team · 12 min read · Updated December 2025

If you're an Indian D2C founder selling on marketplaces, here's a number you've probably never sat down with: the true cost of every order you fulfil. Not the headline commission. Not just the gateway fee. The whole stack.

Once you tally it up — platform fees, payment fees, return shipping, marketplace ads, packaging compliance, mandatory protection plans — you're looking at 22–32% of every rupee gone before you've paid for the product itself.

The Marketplace Math, Honestly

Let's take a typical ₹999 product and run the numbers on a top Indian marketplace:

That's ₹370–₹500 gone before COGS. On a ₹999 SKU. If your product costs ₹400 to land, you're not running a business — you're running a charity for someone else's logistics empire.

"We were profitable on paper, broke in the bank account. That's marketplace math."

Why It Feels Stuck

Three traps keep brands stuck:

1. The visibility trap

The moment you stop spending on marketplace ads, your sales fall off a cliff. You don't own the customer relationship — the marketplace does. You're paying rent on traffic that should have been yours.

2. The data trap

You don't know who bought from you. No email. No phone. Often not even the city. You can't run retention. You can't compute LTV. You can't build a brand — only a SKU.

3. The race-to-the-bottom trap

Your competitor in the same listing is selling at -2% margin to get the buybox. You either match them and starve, or hold your price and disappear. Neither builds a business.

What Owned-Channel Commerce Actually Changes

When you sell on your own store with your own payment gateway:

"But marketplaces give me volume."

They do. And they should — but as a discovery channel, not your only channel. The smart D2C brands we work with run a 60-30-10 split: 60% of revenue from owned, 30% from one or two marketplaces (kept profitable, or used purely for trial), 10% from organic and referrals.

The shift doesn't have to happen overnight. The shift just has to start.

A 90-Day Migration Plan

  1. Days 1–14: Stand up your own store with a custom domain. Migrate your top-20 SKUs first.
  2. Days 15–30: Run your first ad campaigns to your store with proper conversion tracking. Aim for ROAS > 2.5 before scaling.
  3. Days 31–60: Set up email + WhatsApp flows: welcome, abandoned cart, post-purchase. These alone usually pay for the platform many times over.
  4. Days 61–90: Add inserts in marketplace orders driving repeat customers to your store. Cap your marketplace ad spend. Measure contribution margin per channel.

The Bottom Line

You can keep handing 22–32% to marketplaces and call it the cost of doing business. Or you can keep that margin, build an asset (your customer list, your brand, your data), and compound it.

Most Indian D2C brands realise this too late. The ones that realise it early are the ones that become category leaders.

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