Social commerce is the process of selling products directly through social media platforms. The global market hit $1.63 trillion in 2025 and is growing at 29% annually. Here’s how it works, which platforms matter, and what the numbers look like.
Last updated: March 2026 · 12 min read
Three levels of depth: simple, technical, and practitioner.
Simple explanation: You see a product on Instagram, TikTok, or Pinterest. You tap it. You buy it. You never visit a separate website. The entire transaction happens inside the social app. That’s social commerce. It turns scrolling into shopping by removing the friction between “I want that” and “I own that.” Technical explanation: Social commerce integrates product catalogs, checkout infrastructure, and payment processing directly into social media platforms. Brands sync their product inventory (via Shopify, WooCommerce, or direct API integrations) with platform-native shops (Instagram Shop, TikTok Shop, Facebook Marketplace). The platform handles product discovery (via algorithmic feeds, search, and creator content), transaction processing (in-app checkout with stored payment methods), and post-purchase communication (order tracking, customer support via DMs). Revenue is subject to platform commission fees (typically 2-8% depending on platform and category). Practitioner take: Social commerce collapses the traditional funnel. In standard e-commerce, a customer sees an ad, clicks to a website, browses, adds to cart, and checks out across 5-7 steps. In social commerce, discovery and purchase happen in 2-3 taps. That compression changes everything about how you think about conversion optimization. You’re not building landing pages. You’re building content that sells within the feed. At ScaleGrowth.Digital, we treat social commerce as a distinct channel with its own unit economics, not just “social media with a buy button.”Social commerce is the buying and selling of products directly within social media platforms, from discovery to checkout, without leaving the app.
Market size, growth rates, and the platforms driving revenue.
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Global market size (2026 est.) | $2.11 trillion | Fortune Business Insights, 2026 |
| Projected market by 2031 | $7.55 trillion | Mordor Intelligence, 2026 |
| CAGR (2026-2031) | 29.12% | Mordor Intelligence, 2026 |
| US social commerce sales (2026) | $100+ billion | eMarketer, 2026 |
| TikTok Shop GMV (2026 forecast) | $87 billion | Blogging Wizard / TikTok, 2026 |
| Video commerce market share | 43.22% | Mordor Intelligence, 2025 |
| Mobile share of social commerce | 91% | Mordor Intelligence, 2025 |
Feature comparison across the six major platforms as of Q1 2026.
| Platform | Shop Feature | In-App Checkout | Live Shopping | Commission |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TikTok Shop | Yes | Yes | Yes | 2-8% |
| Instagram Shopping | Yes | Yes (US) | Limited | 5% |
| Facebook Marketplace | Yes | Yes | Yes | 5% |
| Product Pins | Via Shopify | No | None (ad model) | |
| YouTube Shopping | Yes | Via Shopify | Yes | Varies |
| Snapchat | AR Try-On | Limited | No | None |
| Category | Growth Rate (CAGR to 2031) | Why It Works on Social |
|---|---|---|
| Beauty and personal care | 33.12% | Visual, demonstrable, AR try-ons bridge confidence gaps |
| Fashion and apparel | ~16% | Style inspiration + impulse buying |
| Home and decor | ~20% | Visual discovery (especially Pinterest) |
| Food and beverage | ~18% | Creator reviews, unboxing, recipe content |
| Electronics and gadgets | ~14% | Demo videos, comparison content |
Source: Mordor Intelligence Social Commerce Market Report, 2026 Beauty and personal care is the breakout category, growing at double the rate of apparel. The reason: AR and AI tools (virtual try-ons, skin analysis) solve the primary objection of “will this work for me?” without requiring a physical store visit. Sephora, Glossier, and dozens of indie brands have built eight-figure social commerce businesses on this dynamic.
“Social commerce isn’t a marketing channel. It’s a distribution model. When TikTok Shop does $87 billion in GMV in a single year, that’s not a trend. That’s a structural shift in how products reach buyers. Brands that still treat social media as ‘awareness only’ are leaving revenue on the platform. The ones winning are the ones that let creators sell for them at scale.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
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E-commerce happens on your own website or marketplace (Amazon, Shopify store). Social commerce happens entirely within a social media platform. The key difference is the discovery model: e-commerce relies on search intent (the buyer is looking for something), while social commerce relies on algorithmic discovery (the buyer sees something interesting in their feed). Both result in a purchase, but the path and psychology differ.
It depends on your audience and product. TikTok Shop is best for impulse-friendly products under $50 targeting Gen Z and younger Millennials. Instagram works for lifestyle, fashion, and aspirational brands. Pinterest is strongest for home, wedding, and design categories where users browse with purchase intent. YouTube Shopping suits products that benefit from longer demonstrations or reviews.
Setting up shops on TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook is free. You pay platform commissions (2-8%) only when you make a sale. The real costs are content production (product photography, video content) and creator partnerships (affiliate commissions of 5-20%). Most brands allocate $2,000-5,000/month for content production when starting social commerce.
No. D2C brands were early adopters, but B2B brands, local businesses, and service companies are using social commerce features. B2B brands use LinkedIn product pages and Instagram to drive demo requests. Local businesses use Facebook Marketplace and Instagram Shopping for in-store pickup orders. Any business with a product or productized service can use social commerce.
Social commerce conversion rates (from product view to purchase) typically range from 1-5%, comparable to e-commerce. However, the metric that matters more is content-to-conversion: what percentage of people who see your shoppable content end up buying. That number is usually 0.1-0.5% for organic content and 1-3% for paid shoppable ads. Creator content typically converts 2-4x better than brand-produced content.
We build social commerce strategies that connect content, creators, and checkout into a single revenue engine. Free audit for qualified brands. Get Your Social Commerce Audit →