Amazon.com is leading the U.S. e-commerce market, with e-commerce net sales of US$ 112,477 million in 2020 generated in the U.S., followed by Walmart.com with US$ 41,114 million. Third place is taken by Bestbuy.com with revenues of US$ 18,674 million. Homedepot.com is the fourth biggest online store in the U.S. with net sales of US$ 16,914 million in 2020.
Here are the top online stores in the United States in 2020, by e-commerce net sales (in million U.S. dollar):
- Amazon.com:$112,477 million
- Walmart.com:$41,114 million
- Bestbuy.com:$18,674 million
- Homedepot.com:$16,914 million
- Rarget.com:$16,225 million
- Apple.com:$14,154 million
- Wayfair.com:$9,921 million
- Lowes.com:$7,435 million
- Kroger.com:$7,211 million
- Chewy.com: $7,146 million
For an extended ranking as well as rankings in specific product categories, please visit ecommerceDB.com.
The eCommerceDB provides detailed information for over 20,000 online stores in more than 50 countries, including detailed revenue analytics, competitor analysis, market development, marketing budget, and interesting KPIs, such as traffic, shipping providers, payment options, social media activity and many more.
The e-commerce market encompasses the sale of physical goods via a digital channel to a private end user (B2C).
Incorporated in this definition are purchases via desktop computer (including notebooks and laptops) as well as purchases via mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets. The following are not included in the e-commerce market: marketplace platforms only, digitally distributed services (e.g. travel tickets), online stores dedicated to digital media downloads or streams as well as online stores dedicated to B2B markets nor sales between private persons (C2C).
Market volume, market growth and all monetary figures at store level refer to the annual e-commerce net sales after the deduction of returns. For more information, please visit the methodology page on ecommerceDB.com.
This article originally appeared on Statista.com and was syndicated by MediaFeed.org.
More from MediaFeed:
7 weird retail trends that will change the way you shop
Featured Image Credit: Jorge Villalba/istockphoto.









