Swiggy hikes platform fee to Rs 14 citing festive demand

By IANS | Updated: August 15, 2025 16:30 IST2025-08-15T16:24:05+5:302025-08-15T16:30:06+5:30

New Delhi, Aug 15 Food delivery major Swiggy has once again hiked its platform fee for food delivery ...

Swiggy hikes platform fee to Rs 14 citing festive demand | Swiggy hikes platform fee to Rs 14 citing festive demand

Swiggy hikes platform fee to Rs 14 citing festive demand

New Delhi, Aug 15 Food delivery major Swiggy has once again hiked its platform fee for food delivery orders, now by Rs 2. Citing a rise in customer transactions during the festive season, the company has increased the fee from Rs 12 to Rs 14 to capitalise on the festive demand.

The food delivery platform has been consistently increasing the fees. Swiggy’s fee climbed from Rs 2 in April 2023 to Rs 6 in July 2024 and Rs 10 in October 2024. The current fees of Rs 14 are a staggering 600 per cent rise in just over two years.

Swiggy processes over 2 million orders daily, and at current platform fee levels, this generates an additional income of crores of rupees daily.

The company was yet to react to the increased platform fee.

Swiggy reported a net loss of Rs 1,197 crore year-on-year (YoY) for the June quarter (Q1 FY26), almost double the Rs 611 crore loss it posted in the same period previous year (Q1 FY25).

On quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) basis, the Bengaluru-based firm posted a net loss of Rs 1,081 crore in the previous quarter (Q4 FY25), according to its stock exchange filing. The widening losses were mainly due to its Quick Commerce division, Instamart, where the financial strain deepened sharply.

Zomato and Swiggy have previously tested higher platform fees on high-demand days. If order volumes remained unaffected, they maintained the new fee structure.

Zomato has also implemented five hikes in under two years, a 400 per cent increase. Zomato has also implemented five hikes in under two years, a 400 per cent increase.

Due to the Swiggy-Zomato duopoly imposing commission rates up to 35 per cent, restaurant owners are forced to inflate menu prices, making online orders over 50 per cent costlier than dining in, according to multiple surveys.

The companies have also been consistently facing criticism for failing to improve worker conditions despite multiple fee increases for consumers.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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