September E-Grocery Sales Surge to New High, Up 31% Versus Year Ago

According to the Brick Meets Click Grocery Shopper Survey, growth was fueled by the largest base of e-grocery shoppers to date, continued gains in order frequency and strong spending per order.

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According to the survey, the share of weekly grocery spending that went online in September 2025 jumped 400 basis points versus last year, ending the month at nearly 19%.
(Image courtesy of Brick Meets Click)

U.S. online grocery sales surged to a new high of $12.5 billion in September, marking a 31% increase over the previous year and the second consecutive month a record was set, according to the Brick Meets Click Grocery Shopper Survey, sponsored by Mercatus.

Driven by a record-setting number of monthly active users, sustained gains in order frequency and solid increases in average order value, online spending for September captured its highest share since very early during the pandemic, according to a news release.

The overall base of e-grocery MAUs hit a new high during September, up nearly 13% year over year. The vast majority of the increase came from re-engaging less frequent customers who most recently bought groceries online two to three months prior. All three receiving methods posted gains in their respective MAU bases versus last year, with delivery setting a new high as well. In addition, all age groups reported more MAUs YOY, with the 60-plus group contributing almost half of the YOY gains.

The average number of online orders per MAU during the month climbed 9% versus year ago, marking 13 consecutive months of YOY gains in frequency. This increase was fueled by a jump in the share of MAUs completing three or more online orders during September. Small metro markets posted the strongest relative gains in frequency, climbing at a rate nearly twice that of the other market types.

The share of weekly grocery spending that went online in September 2025 jumped 400 basis points versus last year, ending the month at nearly 19%. This is the second-highest contribution level recorded for e-grocery behind only May 2020.

The combined AOV for delivery and pickup grew by almost 8% YOY. Gains were recorded across supermarket, mass and dollar, along with larger surges in spending at hard discounters and club. In addition, ship-to-home’s AOV finished up by nearly 11% YOY, driven primarily by Amazon’s pure-play services and the firm’s ongoing expansion of same-day fresh grocery.

The share of weekly grocery spending that went online in September 2025 jumped 400 basis points versus last year, ending the month at nearly 19%. This is the second-highest contribution level recorded for e-grocery behind only May 2020. Online growth continues to negatively impact in-store performance. From January through September 2025, in-store sales growth YOY slowed to under 1.5% compared to 3% during the comparable period in 2024.

“A sign of the growing challenges facing regional grocers is the sharp increase in the share of Grocery MAUs that also completed at least one e-grocery order with mass during September versus the two prior years,” says David Bishop, partner for Brick Meets Click. “The results reveal cross-shopping rates with Walmart continued to expand significantly in 2025, and the rate for Target also increased YOY, even though it remains significantly lower than Walmart.”

The Brick Meets Click Grocery Shopping Survey is an ongoing independent research initiative created and conducted by the team at Brick Meets Click and sponsored by Mercatus.

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