
Swiggy, India’s leading food delivery platform is facing increasing financial pressure in 2026 as its quick commerce arm, Instamart, drags down overall profitability for the company. While the company continues to expand its reach in the food delivery industry, the increasing costs of maintaining Instamart’s rapid delivery infrastructure is causing a significant drag on earnings.
The significant strain between Swiggy’s growth strategy and financial sustainability has become a defining challenge for Swiggy’s future strategy.
Swiggy Business Model Challenges
Currently, Swiggy runs a dual business model that combines food delivery with quick commerce through Instamart. The company rapidly built warehouses and expanded its delivery network so it can process its growing number of orders faster and reliably.
This approach generates high fixed costs in warehousing, Inventory handling and delivery partners payouts. Swiggy also spends heavily on advertising and promotions which rose 47.5% year‑on‑year to ₹1,108 crore in Q3 FY26, further eroding margins.
The Cost Burden of Instamart
Instamart has become Swiggy’s largest loss‑making vertical. In Q3 FY26, Instamart processed 106.4 million orders from 12.8 million users, supported by 1,136 active dark stores. Despite generating more than ₹1,000 crore in quarterly revenue, Instamart reported losses of ₹791–908 crore, up from ₹528 crore a year earlier.
Additionally, warehousing rentals, dark store operations, last‑mile delivery, and customer incentives drive these losses. Even as contribution margins slightly improved, aggressive expansion and fee waivers killed profitability.
Competition in Food Delivery
Swiggy’s food delivery segment remains its backbone, with gross order value rising 20.5% year‑on‑year and segment revenue reaching ₹2,041 crore in Q3 FY26.
However, competition in India’s food delivery market intensifies. Zomato continues to lead in market share, while platforms like magicpin emphasize merchant diversity and value‑driven strategies.
Industry leaders argue that customer experience, delivery speed, and value consciousness will define growth in 2026, forcing Swiggy to spend heavily to retain users.
Financial Impact and Losses
Swiggy reported a net loss of ₹1,065 crore in Q3 FY26, compared to ₹799 crore a year earlier, despite consolidated revenue rising 54% year‑on‑year to ₹6,148 crore.
Meanwhile, Instamart alone accounted for the majority of the deficit, reinforcing its drag on combined results. Analysts forecast Swiggy’s earnings growth at 69% per annum and revenue growth at 22.6% per annum, but profitability remains uncertain.
Future Outlook
Currently, Swiggy is preparing for its IPO, with investor sentiment hinging on whether it can restructure Instamart’s economics. Reports note that despite strong revenue growth, Swiggy remains unprofitable with negative returns on equity and capital.
Ultimately, analysts argue that Swiggy must recalibrate its quick‑commerce strategy, focusing on cost discipline and operational efficiency rather than pure scale. Without decisive action, the company risks carrying forward a financial imbalance that undermines its long‑term competitiveness.