Skip to content

Returns cost online retailers an average of five to ten euros

Ordered online, don't like it, sent back. What is positive for customers leads to costs for retailers. They are specifically trying to reduce the number of returns.

Online retailers are struggling with the high costs of returns. Photo.aussiedlerbote.de
Online retailers are struggling with the high costs of returns. Photo.aussiedlerbote.de

Consumer goods - Returns cost online retailers an average of five to ten euros

Despite major efforts to reduce the number of returns, online retailers are struggling with the high costs of returns. This is the result of a study by the retail research institute EHI, for which online retailers from Germany, Austria and Switzerland were surveyed.

According to the study, the average cost is between five and ten euros for each returned item. Returns in the home and furnishings sector are particularly expensive at 10 to 20 euros due to their size and higher value. According to the respondents, the biggest cost driver is checking the returned items and checking their quality.

Differences depending on the sector

According to the study, the volume of returns varies greatly depending on the industry. Fashion products have particularly high rates of 26 to 50 percent on average. Online shoppers often order several variants in order to decide which item of clothing they like best when trying it on, write the authors of the study. This is part of the business model. Many of the returned fashion items then go back on sale.

On average across all product groups, the item-related returns rate is between six and ten percent and therefore at a similar level to previous years. 58% of retailers state that the rate is constant, with 21% reporting a slight increase and 15% a slight decrease. According to the study, the pandemic has not had a significant impact on the trend.

Reasons for returns are recorded

74% of retailers specifically try to avoid returns. In order to be able to take the right countermeasures, 70% record the reasons for returns. For 86% of respondents, detailed information in the online store with precise descriptions and images is the most important measure to reduce the rate.

Few sellers leave the shipping costs for returns to the customer. Only 14 percent of online retailers make use of this option to reduce the number of returns. Almost two thirds cover the shipping costs. "It seems essential for them to offer this service due to the high level of competition and because they assume that customers expect such a service," write the authors.

According to a survey by market research company GfK, Germans were not as keen to shop online this year as they were in 2022, spending 17% less money in nominal terms - i.e. not adjusted for price - than in the previous year. "After Germans were forced to buy many things online during the pandemic, they are now increasingly drawn to local stores again," says GfK retail expert Filip Vojtech.

Read also:

  1. To mitigate the high costs associated with returns, online retailers are focusing on reducing the number of returns in online trading.
  2. In the home and furnishings sector, returns are particularly expensive due to their size and higher value, costing retailers 10 to 20 euros per item.
  3. Fashion products have high return rates of 26 to 50%, with shoppers often ordering multiple variants to decide on the best item.
  4. postal services play a role in returns, as 66% of retailers cover the shipping costs for returns to keep customers satisfied.
  5. In Austria and Switzerland, online shoppers are also contributing to higher returns in retail trade, as the study findings indicate.
  6. The environmental impact of online returns is a concern, as return shipments for consumer goods contribute to increased CO2 emissions and waste in postal services.

Source: www.stern.de

Comments

Latest

Grave accusations levied against JVA staff members in Bavaria

Grave accusations levied against JVA staff members in Bavaria

Grave accusations levied against JVA staff members in Bavaria The Augsburg District Attorney's Office is currently investigating several staff members of the Augsburg-Gablingen prison (JVA) on allegations of severe prisoner mistreatment. The focus of the investigation is on claims of bodily harm in the workplace. It's

Members Public