In the competitive landscape of India’s foodtech sector, Zomato and Swiggy are two dominant players relentlessly vying for supremacy. The first quarter results for the fiscal year 2026 provide fresh insights into who is leading the race, especially in terms of valuation, operational performance, and strategic positioning. Why Zomato is receiving a valuation premium over Swiggy despite certain growth dynamics.
Understanding Gross Order Value (GOV) in Food Delivery
Gross Order Value (GOV) represents the total monetary value of completed food delivery orders on a platform. Essentially, it reflects the total amount customers spend on items such as meals, inclusive of discounts, delivery charges, and packaging costs adjusted accordingly. For investors and analysts, GOV is a critical measure of the platform’s market penetration and sales volume.
When comparing Q1 FY26 GOV numbers, both Zomato and Swiggy show growth albeit at slightly different scales. Zomato reported a 16% year-on-year growth in food delivery GOV, whereas Swiggy outpaced slightly at 19%. However, both companies acknowledged an industry-wide slowdown toward the end of the last calendar year, suggesting that 20% growth is a healthy normative benchmark in this sector, which they expect to recover in FY27. Despite Swiggy’s marginally better recent growth, Zomato holds a clear advantage in total market share and order base, signaling stronger dominance in food delivery.
User Metrics and Contribution Margins
Tracking the number of average monthly transacting users is pivotal for these app-centric businesses. Zomato saw a significant spike in such users in Q1 FY26, outpacing Swiggy’s gains. This signals better customer engagement and retention on Zomato’s platform.
Contribution margin, expressed as a percentage of GOV, measures profitability from food delivery after deducting variable costs like payments to delivery partners and discount expenses. Zomato’s contribution margin stood at 8.2% in Q1 FY26, compared to Swiggy’s 7.3%. This higher margin underscores Zomato’s operational efficiencies and better cost control, which make it a more profitable operator despite similar revenue scale.
The Quick Commerce Battle: Blinkit vs Instamart
Quick commerce, or instant delivery of groceries and essentials, has emerged as a pivotal front. Zomato’s quick commerce arm Blinkit outperformed Swiggy’s Instamart in Q1 FY26 in terms of gross order value growth, clocking an impressive 140% year-on-year expansion against Instamart’s 108%.
Blinkit benefits from a rapid increase in active dark stores — specialized fulfillment centers aimed at boosting delivery speed and convenience. Blinkit announced a total of 1,544 dark stores during the quarter, with plans to escalate to 2,000 by the end of 2025. In contrast, Swiggy added only 41 stores in the same period, revealing a slower expansion pace and a strategic lag.
Average order values (AOV) in Blinkit are also marginally higher than Instamart’s, which is crucial because higher AOVs improve fixed cost absorption and unit economics. Additionally, Blinkit’s monthly transacting users saw a steep rise from 1.06 million to approximately 1.7 million over a few quarters, while Instamart’s user base growth has been comparatively modest.
Profitability in Quick Commerce
Unlike food delivery, quick commerce profitability remains a challenge industry-wide. Blinkit has managed to sustain positive contribution margins (around 3%) consistently over several quarters, whereas Instamart continues to operate in negative territory, albeit with some gradual improvement. However, recent increases in dark store additions have slightly pressured Blinkit’s margins due to upfront capital and operational costs.
Valuation Insight: Why Zomato Commands a Premium
From a valuation perspective, Zomato’s parent company, now referred to as ‘Eternal,’ commands a market cap close to ₹3 lakh crore with a price-to-sales ratio of approximately 12.7. Conversely, Swiggy, despite its scale, holds a market cap nearer to ₹1 lakh crore and a price-to-sales ratio of 5.81. The stark difference in multiples reflects market confidence in Zomato’s superior execution, stronger profitability trends, and cash reserves that provide leverage for strategic initiatives.
Zomato’s trailing twelve months revenue stands at ₹23,200 crore compared to Swiggy’s ₹17,000 crore. Furthermore, Zomato’s cash on books is around ₹1,800 crore, while Swiggy holds ₹5,300 crore, but Swiggy’s ongoing losses and negative contribution margins hint at a need to raise further funds, potentially diluting shareholder value.
Market Share Summary
- Food delivery market share: Zomato commands about 55-60%, Swiggy about 40-45%.
- Quick commerce market share: Blinkit holds approximately 45-50%, Instamart around 20-25%, with the remainder held by other players like Zopto and Big Basket.
Strategic Observations
Quick commerce remains a growing theme, especially in Tier 1 metro cities where penetration is not yet saturated. However, economic viability in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities is uncertain for now. Both companies’ long-term growth depends not only on expanding in metro markets but also on successfully scaling in smaller cities when unit economics allow.
The comparison concludes that while Swiggy has shown impressive recent revenue growth, Zomato’s leadership in market share, profitability metrics, and aggressive dark store expansion in quick commerce gives it an edge. Investors appear to value Zomato’s execution capabilities, resilience during industry slowdowns, and better margin profile more confidently, justifying its higher valuation.