Amazon Dominates 2025: The World’s Most-Visited E-Commerce Sites
2025 E-Commerce Insight Alert
According to a recent study by Voronoi, the global e-commerce landscape is more top-heavy than ever:
• Amazon captures ≈ 43% of visits among the top 20 e-commerce sites.
• The top five platforms (Amazon, Temu, AliExpress, eBay and Ozon) account for nearly 60% of total traffic.

| Rank | Platform | Domain | Country / Primary Market | Monthly Visits |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Amazon | amazon.com | U.S. | 2.7B |
| 2 | Temu | temu.com | China | 1.6B |
| 3 | AliExpress | aliexpress.com | China | 646M |
| 4 | eBay | ebay.com | U.S. | 635M |
| 5 | Ozon | ozon.ru | Russia | 527M |
| 6 | Amazon Japan | amazon.co.jp | Japan | 525M |
| 7 | Walmart | walmart.com | U.S. | 506M |
| 8 | Amazon India | amazon.in | India | 435M |
| 9 | Rakuten Japan | rakuten.co.jp | Japan | 419M |
| 10 | Amazon Germany | amazon.de | Germany | 407M |
| 11 | Etsy | etsy.com | U.S. | 385M |
| 12 | Amazon UK | amazon.co.uk | United Kingdom | 370M |
| 13 | Coupang | coupang.com | South Korea | 290M |
| 14 | Mercado Libre | mercadolibre.com | Latin America (notably Brazil) | 260M |
| 15 | Target | target.com | U.S. | 187M |
| 16 | Flipkart | flipkart.com | India | 186M |
| 17 | Amazon Brazil | amazon.com.br | Brazil | 175M |
| 18 | Rakuten Global | rakuten.com | Global | 162M |
| 19 | Shopify | shopify.com | Canada / Global SaaS | 154M |
| 20 | Ticketmaster | ticketmaster.com | U.S. | 108M |
Source: We Are Social / Visual Capitalist (via Voronoi),
In 2025, the global e-commerce world isn’t just competitive — it’s dominated. According to Visual Capitalist, the top 20 e-commerce sites are almost entirely controlled by a handful of players.
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The Amazon network alone captures roughly 43% of visits among the top 20 e-commerce sites globally.
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And the top five platforms — Amazon, Temu, AliExpress, eBay and Ozon — together account for nearly 60% of total traffic.
Let’s unpack what this means for digital businesses, domain-strategists, and AI-driven commerce innovators.
1. The Numbers You Need to Know
Here are some highlights from the monthly visits ranking:
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Amazon ~2.7 billion.
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Temu ~1.63 billion.
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AliExpress ~646 million.
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eBay ~635 million.
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Ozon ~527 million.
These numbers illustrate how concentrated online shopping traffic truly is, and why “standing out” has never been harder.
2. Why This Dominance Matters for You
Platform leverage & moat creation
When one entity (Amazon) claims nearly half of all visits in the top 20, it means they are setting the rules: fulfillment standards, customer expectations (speed, price, service), and even what it means to be a “store” today.
If you’re in the domain game (especially “.ai”, “agent-commerce”, “shopbot”, etc.), this concentration hints at where value “funnels” will emerge.
Shifting to “agentic” commerce
Your earlier interest in terms like “autonomous commerce”, “AI-powered ordering” and the like syncs with this dynamic: the dominant platforms will likely be the base layer. The next frontier—agent-driven transactions, voice/agent shopping, seamless check-out—will build on top of this traffic and infrastructure reality.
Domain implications
When traffic is bound up among few large platforms, the domain real-estate around “sub-platforms”, “middleware”, “agent connectors”, “catalog sync”, becomes more valuable. Domains aligned to “AI-agent-commerce”, “shop-agent.ai”, “autonomous-checkout.ai” etc may become strategic if they plug into the big flows.
Regional & global considerations
Note the presence of multiple geographies: China (Temu, AliExpress), Russia (Ozon), Japan, India etc. This tells you that global scale matters — not just U.S./Europe. So domains or ventures with multi-region ambitions (like yours) are well-positioned.
3. Strategic Actions You Can Take
Given your domain portfolio, consultancy/aggregator projects, and side ventures, here are tailored moves:
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Audit your domain inventory: Identify names that map to this dominance trend. Think about “agentic-commerce.ai”, “ai-shoppingagent.com.ai”, “global-shopbot.ai” etc.
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Build middleware or integration readiness: For your aggregator/marketplace plays (rental, quote apps, digital consultancy), ensure your tech stack is “platform-ready” (catalog feeds, API integration, checkout automation) because the big traffic platforms will demand it.
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Position for agent-first commerce: If the traffic is so concentrated, the next wave is the interface layer (AI agents). Consider how your side ventures can act as the “agent layer” rather than the “store layer”.
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Regional expansion with global lens: Since big players are global and multi-regional, your UAE/Abu Dhabi base gives you an advantage. Consider domain names that carry “MENA-agent-commerce.ai” or “gcc-shoppingagent.ai”.
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Use this for the board / pitch material: In your next 10-slide deck, include these stats (43%, top-5 ≈ 60%) to emphasize strategic urgency. This adds credibility when you argue for “why we must plug into the major platforms and rail our infrastructure accordingly”.
4. Risks & Caveats to Keep in Mind
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Traffic doesn’t automatically mean profitability: One of the giants may dominate visits but margins, growth may differ.
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Smaller players still have niches: Although the top-5 dominate, there’s still value in niche, vertical, localized platforms. Don’t ignore that.
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Domain value ≠ guaranteed monetisation: Just owning a relevant domain is no guarantee — you’ll need to build partnerships, execution, go-to-market strategy.
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Platform shifts & regulation: Dominance may be challenged by regulation (antitrust), localization demands, new entrants, or shifts in how people shop (e.g., via agents, voice, social commerce).
5. Conclusion: What’s the Big Picture?
The 2025 e-commerce traffic landscape is clear: a handful of platforms dominate. If you’re building in the domain, AI-commerce, aggregator, or marketplace space, your play must recognise that reality — and aim to plug into, enable, or augment those flows rather than fight them in isolation.
In short: Traffic is concentrated. Host the traffic, or enable the traffic. And always think one layer above — where the agents, the experiences, the platform-connectors live.
💡 Advice for Smaller E-Commerce Players
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Differentiate Through Experience, Not Price
Competing with global giants on price or delivery speed is nearly impossible. Instead, focus on unique experiences — curated collections, expert advice, authentic storytelling, and community engagement. -
Leverage Niche Specialization
Consumers are increasingly drawn to specialized brands that understand their lifestyle or values. Focus on specific verticals (eco-friendly goods, local artisans, tech accessories, etc.) and own that niche with authority. -
Adopt Smart Technology Early
Integrate AI-driven tools for personalization, inventory optimization, and customer service. Automation and predictive analytics can help smaller teams deliver big-brand efficiency. -
Embrace Marketplaces, Don’t Fear Them
Instead of viewing Amazon or Temu as competitors, use them as sales channels. A hybrid strategy — combining your own online store with presence on large marketplaces — can increase visibility and trust. -
Build a Brand That Means Something
The next wave of commerce is built on identity and trust. Brands that stand for quality, transparency, and customer connection will win long-term loyalty even without massive ad budgets.
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- Source: VisualCapitalist, Voronoi & WeAresocial

