Swedish E-Commerce Surges 16% in October, Signalling Robust Holiday Season Outlook 

E-commerce in Sweden continues its robust upward trajectory, with October 2025 data revealing a 16% year-on-year increase in turnover—reaching SEK 13.1 billion at an annualized rate. According to the latest figures from the Swedish Chamber of Commerce, this marks the fourth consecutive month of double-digit growth, reinforcing the sector’s resilience and setting a confident tone ahead of the crucial Black Week and Christmas shopping period.

“The momentum we observed in recent months is holding firm,” said Per Ljungberg, Innovation Manager at Svensk Handel, the Swedish Trade Federation. “These latest numbers reflect a market entering its most commercially intense weeks of the year with strong fundamentals and renewed optimism. Retailers are well-positioned for a dynamic and potentially record-breaking holiday season.”

Rising Basket Sizes, Not Shoppers, Drive Growth

Notably, the surge in e-commerce activity is being fuelled not by an increase in the number of online shoppers, but by a marked rise in average spend per customer—a trend that has persisted throughout the second half of 2025. Analysts interpret this as evidence of shifting consumer behaviour: rather than new users coming online, existing digital shoppers are consolidating purchases, opting for higher-value items, or reducing reliance on in-store shopping in favour of more convenient, consolidated online orders.

This pattern aligns with broader macroeconomic conditions. While inflationary pressures have moderated compared to 2023–2024, Swedish households remain cost-conscious. Consumers appear to be making fewer—but more deliberate and larger—purchases, possibly in anticipation of seasonal discounts during Black Friday and the pre-Christmas sales window.

Strategic Implications for Retailers

The data suggests that Swedish e-commerce businesses should prioritize customer retention and lifetime value over user acquisition in the near term. Tactics such as personalized recommendations, bundled offers, and loyalty incentives may prove particularly effective in maximising basket size during peak shopping periods.

Moreover, as logistics networks brace for holiday demand spikes, the sustained high-value transaction trend could ease some operational strain. Larger orders typically reduce the number of individual shipments per revenue unit, potentially lowering per-unit fulfilment costs—a welcome efficiency gain amid ongoing pressure on delivery margins.

Nordic Context and Forward Outlook

Sweden’s e-commerce performance mirrors broader regional strength across the Nordics, where digital retail penetration remains among the highest globally. Norway and Denmark have also reported double-digit online sales growth in Q3–Q4 2025, driven by similar consumer consolidation behaviours and advanced digital infrastructure.

Looking ahead, analysts at Handelsbanken Research project that if current trends hold, Swedish e-commerce could close 2025 with annual growth exceeding 14%—outpacing overall retail growth by a wide margin. With Cyber Monday just days away and Christmas shopping extending well into December, the sector appears primed for a strong finish to the year.

For stakeholders across the Nordic digital economy, October’s figures are more than a seasonal uptick—they signal a structural shift toward higher-value, experience-driven online retail that could define the next phase of e-commerce maturity in the region.

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