
China’s 30-Minute Delivery Wars: How Instant Commerce Is Eating E-Commerce
Meituan, Ele.me, and JD.com race to deliver everything in half an hour
Instant commerce — the 30-minute delivery of everything from skincare to smartphones — is the fastest-growing segment of China’s retail market in 2026. Meituan processes over 2 billion instant delivery orders annually, and the platform’s non-food categories (beauty, pharma, electronics, household goods) are growing at 40% year-on-year.
The shift represents a fundamental change in consumer behavior. Chinese consumers, particularly in Tier 1 and Tier 2 cities, increasingly expect delivery within 30 minutes for any purchase under 500 yuan ($70). The convenience expectation is reshaping how brands distribute, market, and price their products.
How the platforms compete
- Meituan: dominates with its massive rider network (5+ million active couriers) and real-time inventory visibility from partner stores
- Ele.me (Alibaba): expanding beyond food into beauty and consumer electronics, leveraging Alibaba’s Tmall inventory
- JD.com: building competing instant-delivery infrastructure, but retrofitting systems designed for next-day delivery
- Douyin (ByteDance): testing instant commerce in select cities, integrating shopping into short video content
“The convenience addiction is real,” said Cyril Drouin, CEO of Beyond Border Group, a China e-commerce consultancy. “Once you’ve experienced 30-minute delivery for skincare, you don’t go back to waiting two days.”
The economics
Instant commerce is expensive to operate. The per-order delivery cost averages 6-8 yuan ($0.85-$1.10), compared to 2-3 yuan for standard e-commerce delivery. Platforms subsidize delivery fees to drive adoption, but the subsidy model is unsustainable at scale.
The path to profitability involves higher average order values, advertising revenue from brands that want premium placement, and data monetization. Meituan’s instant commerce division turned profitable in Q4 2025 for the first time.
Impact on traditional retail
Physical retail stores are being repurposed as fulfillment centers. Convenience stores, pharmacies, and supermarkets increasingly serve dual functions: in-store shopping and instant delivery dispatch points. This hybrid model — what the industry calls “retail as a service” — is blurring the line between online and offline commerce.
For brands, the implication is clear: if your product isn’t available for 30-minute delivery in major Chinese cities, you’re losing sales to competitors who are.
Sources
- Beyond Border Group, “China 2026: 8 eCommerce & Marketing Predictions”
- Meituan, 2025 annual report, instant commerce data
- Daxue Consulting, “2026 China consumer market trend”








