Return rates are one of the most overlooked cost drivers in ecommerce. Every item sent back eats into margin through processing, restocking and lost revenue. Yet a single, blended return rate can be misleading because return behaviour varies wildly by category. According to industry research, the overall U.S. ecommerce return rate was around 20 percent in 2024 and analysts expect it to climb to roughly 24.5 percent by 2025. That headline number hides a huge range, from single‑digit returns in some categories to rates approaching 50 percent in others.
What is a return rate?
A return rate measures the percentage of items sold that are sent back by customers. It’s calculated using a simple formula: divide the number of items returned by the total number of items sold, then multiply by 100. For example, if you sold 10,000 items last quarter and 2,000 were returned, your return rate would be 20 percen. This is different from a refund rate (which includes partial refunds without a physical return) or an exchange rate (which tracks swaps). Understanding your return rate helps you benchmark performance and target the problems causing customers to send items back.
Overall ecommerce benchmarks
Returns are much more common online than in physical retail. A 2026 Capital One Shopping study reported that online sales in the U.S. have an average return rate of about 24.5 percent. Another survey of U.S. shoppers by the National Retail Federation found that clothing was by far the most returned category, cited by two‑thirds of respondents, while electronics and home goods were far lower. These broad benchmarks illustrate why you shouldn’t panic if your returns outpace a store selling sofas — the nature of your product matters.
Return rates by industry
The table below summarises typical return rates for major ecommerce categories based on recent surveys and industry reports. Note that ranges vary depending on the source; we list conservative ranges where multiple studies agree.
| Category | Typical return rate |
|---|---|
| Fashion & clothing | 20–30% (average around 25%) |
| Shoes | 15–20% (typical 17%) |
| Accessories | 12–20% |
| Food & beverages | ≈12% |
| Consumer electronics | 5–10% |
| Beauty & personal care | 1–10% (most studies show 4–10%) |
| Books, movies, music & games | ≈9% |
| Furniture & household goods | 8–20% |
| Luxury fashion & swimwear | Up to 50% |
| Overall ecommerce average | 20–24.5% |
The pattern is clear: categories involving fit, size or subjective style (clothing, shoes and accessories) have the highest return rates, while straightforward or consumable items (beauty products, books and household goods) see single‑digit returns. Electronics sit in the middle — most shoppers research them heavily before buying, so defects and compatibility problems are the main reasons for returns rather than “changed my mind”.
What’s a good return rate?
There is no universal “good” return rate. A clothing brand with a 22 percent return rate is performing better than average; an electronics store with the same rate has a serious problem. The key is to benchmark yourself against industry peers. If your return rate is within the ranges above — and ideally toward the lower end — you’re likely doing well. If it’s substantially higher, investigate why. Common drivers include inaccurate descriptions, poor sizing information, quality issues or overly generous policies that encourage bracketing (buying multiple sizes with the intention of returning most of them).
How to reduce your return rate
While you can’t eliminate returns entirely, you can shrink them by giving shoppers a clearer picture before they buy. Here are a few high‑impact strategies:
- Improve product pages. Provide detailed descriptions, accurate photos and videos, sizing charts and compatibility information. Many returns stem from vague or incomplete listings that leave customers guessing.
- Offer fit and sizing guidance. Real‑world fit notes (“runs small in the shoulders”) and interactive size finders cut down on apparel returns. For electronics or hardware, include compatibility charts and model numbers.
- Set expectations realistically. Explain usage limitations, care requirements and delivery timeframes. Beauty and personal care returns are low partly because shoppers know what they’re getting and understand that hygiene rules limit returns.
- Monitor return reasons. Segment returns by product type, acquisition channel and reason code. Patterns will reveal whether the problem is fit, damage, quality or inaccurate descriptions — and therefore where to focus your fixes.
- Refine your return policy. Generous policies boost conversion but can also encourage abuse. Shorter windows or restocking fees on low‑margin items, along with incentives for exchanges instead of refunds, help align policy costs with product economics.
Return reduction doesn’t happen by accident. It requires clear product content, data‑driven insights and thoughtful policies. That’s where ReturnGuardian can help — our audit tool analyzes your product listings for missing detail, vague wording and compatibility gaps, giving you a prioritised list of fixes to reduce return risk.
