Amazon Prime Day sales rose by 7.7% YoY, the smallest growth in five years

John E. Kaye
- Published
- Home, News, Technology

Prime Day 2021 generated the highest sales for Amazon so far but had less impact than the 2020 event
Although the eCommerce giant generated around $11.2bn in revenue from the products sold during the two-day shopping event, Prime Day sales growth significantly slowed down compared to recent years.
According to data presented by StockApps.com, Amazon Prime Day sales rose by 7.7% YoY in 2021, the smallest growth in five years.
Nearly Six Times Smaller Sales Growth than in 2020
Amazon Prime Day was launched in 2015 to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Amazon’s founding and quickly turned into the biggest shopping day of the year for the online retailer, making it Black Friday’s summer counterpart.
Since July 2019, the shopping event runs for a total of 48 hours, and according to the official press release for Prime Day 2021, more than 250 million products were purchased by Prime members in 20 countries, making it Amazon’s largest online shopping event.
The Digital Commerce 360 data show that Amazon’s gross merchandise sales on Prime Day 2021 totaled $11.2 bn worldwide, a 7.7% jump in a year. However, that was far less than the sales growth recorded in 2020. Last year, Amazon Prime Day sales amounted to $10.4bn, a massive 45% YoY increase from $7.16bn in 2019.
However, that was still less than the 2019 event, which saw a staggering 71% sales increase. Statistics show that 2018 Prime Day sales totaled around $4.2bn, 74% more than in 2017.
1.3M Sellers Joined Amazon Market Place in the Last Year
Prime Day is a significant marketing opportunity for Amazon to sell its products, confirmed by the 62% sales share in 2018. This is particularly relevant in the computers and electronics segment, the most popular product category among Amazon Prime Day shoppers in the US that year.
Despite that, the Marketplace Pulse data showed that in 2020, around 1.3 million new sellers joined Amazon’s marketplace worldwide. Nearly 14% of them signed up through Amazon.com in the United States. The highest number of new third-party sellers in the United States was recorded in April when “stay-at-home” measures were imposed in several states.
Statistics show that Amazon.in contributed 12.1% of new marketplace sellers. Amazon.nl and Amazon.co.uk followed with 8.5% and 8.2% share, respectively.
For further information click the link below:
Sign up to The European Newsletter
RECENT ARTICLES
-
XTI Aerospace launches Founders Club for TriFan 600 backers
-
New ranking measures how Europe’s biggest retailers report on sustainability
-
CEOs who endured childhood disasters show greater appetite for risky debt, study finds
-
Galorath appoints Julia Gerth to lead EMEA and APAC sales in global expansion push
-
UK to restart trade talks with China after seven-year pause
-
AM Best affirms Active Re’s ‘A’ rating for third year running
-
UK contract recruitment rises despite slowdown in permanent hiring
-
Forterro buys Spain’s Inology to expand southern Europe footprint
-
Singapore student start-up wins $1m Hult Prize for education platform
-
Nigeria’s startup scene takes global stage as Lagos hosts inaugural GITEX NIGERIA
-
City and Gulf investors track golf’s newest global venture
-
UK businesses increase AI investment despite economic uncertainty, Barclays index finds
-
French CEOs warn politics and geopolitics now threaten bottom lines, ESSEC study finds
-
Study links female-dominated classrooms to higher lifetime earnings for women
-
Inside London’s £1bn super-hotel with £20k penthouses, private butlers and a gilded eagle
-
Kia America hits record monthly sales as EV demand surges
-
Trump family’s crypto debut adds $5bn to fortune amid ethics row
-
Warren Buffett turns 95 – the secrets behind a $130 billion fortune
-
Most game developers now using AI in their workflows, Google Cloud study finds
-
BlackRock takes $89m stake in Freedom Holding, emerging as second-largest shareholder
-
Welcome to Britain’s most exclusive founders’ network with £1M entry bar
-
Portugal’s GR22 crowned Europe’s most rewarding hiking trail
-
Music faces a bum note without elephant dung, new research warns
-
Fermi America secures $350m in financing led by Macquarie Group
-
Cambodia to rename key highway after Donald Trump for brokering peace deal