Middle East E-commerce Market Trends: What’s Driving One of the World’s Fastest-Growing Markets

Mobile-first shoppers, social commerce, cross-border demand and the shift from cash to digital — the trends shaping a MENA e-commerce market projected to reach tens of billions.

Ecommerce6 min readPortrait of David O'Sullivan, CEO at Karve DigitalBy David O'Sullivan

The Middle East is one of the fastest-growing e-commerce regions on earth, with the market widely projected to reach roughly US$57 billion by 2026. A young, highly connected, mobile-first population and rapid digital adoption are driving demand — but the way the region buys online has its own distinct shape. Here are the trends that matter for any brand selling into the GCC.

The trends shaping MENA e-commerce

Mobile-first commerce

Mobile is not a channel here, it is the channel — well over 70% of online purchases happen on phones. That makes mobile performance, fast checkout, and app experience the foundation of growth, not an afterthought. A storefront that is merely “mobile responsive” is already behind.

Social commerce

Discovery and decision-making run through Instagram, TikTok, and WhatsApp. Conversational selling, influencer-led launches, and in-feed shopping convert in ways a standalone catalogue does not. For many GCC brands, the social storefront is the storefront.

Cross-border demand

Shoppers routinely buy from regional and international marketplaces, and expect that breadth of choice. Brands that solve duties, currency, language, and delivery expectations — rather than treating cross-border as an edge case — unlock meaningful demand.

From cash on delivery to digital payments

Cash on delivery has historically dominated, preferred by a large majority of shoppers, and it still matters for trust. But digital wallets and buy-now-pay-later are growing fast. The winning posture is to offer both — keep COD for trust while actively nudging toward cheaper, faster digital payment.

AI-driven personalisation

AI and machine learning increasingly power product recommendations, search, and customer profiling. Done well, personalisation lifts conversion and average order value; done lazily, it annoys. The bar is relevance, in Arabic and English alike.

AR and VR experiences

Immersive formats — AR try-on for fashion and beauty, richer product visualisation — are moving from novelty to expectation in premium categories, closing the confidence gap that drives returns.

What this means for brands

The throughline is clear: build mobile-first, sell where people already are (social and marketplaces), make payment and delivery frictionless across borders, and use AI to stay relevant in two languages. The market’s growth is real, but it rewards brands that fit the region’s actual behaviour rather than importing a Western playbook unchanged.

Questions
How big is the Middle East e-commerce market?

It is one of the fastest-growing regions globally, with the market widely projected to reach around US$57 billion by 2026, driven by a young, mobile-first population and rapid digital adoption.

Why is mobile so important for MENA e-commerce?

Mobile devices account for well over 70% of online purchases in the region. Mobile performance, fast checkout, and app experience are therefore the foundation of growth rather than an optimisation.

Is cash on delivery still relevant in the GCC?

Yes — COD has historically been preferred by a large majority of shoppers and still matters for trust. But digital wallets and BNPL are growing quickly, so the best approach offers both while encouraging digital payment.

What role does social commerce play in the region?

A central one. Instagram, TikTok, and WhatsApp drive discovery and conversion through influencer launches and conversational selling — for many GCC brands the social storefront is as important as the website.

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