The true cost of returns: why $850B is just the tip.
NRF puts 2025 US e-commerce returns at $850B, but that’s just the visible refund line. The real economic cost is 2-3× larger.
The visible cost vs. the full cost.
Every operator can quote their refund rate. Far fewer can quote what a return actually costs. The standard P&L treatment, “refund issued, COGS reversed”, captures roughly 35% of the true economic impact of a return.
The other 65% lives in five buckets that don’t show up cleanly on a single line:
- Reverse shipping, paid by the brand on most return-policy regimes, average $7–12/return for domestic.
- Restock labour, inspection, repackaging, re-shelving. Industry average $3–6/return for apparel, $8–14 for electronics.
- Quality write-down, items returned in less-than-new condition sell at 30–60% of original price, if they sell at all.
- Carrying cost during the round-trip, inventory tied up for 14–30 days that could have been sold.
- Customer-acquisition friction, returned customers convert lower on next purchase. The lifecycle hit is real, just hard to attribute.
The 20-65% calculation.
Industry research (NRF + Optoro + AppRiver datasets) consistently puts true returns cost between 20-65% of item retail value, depending on category. The variance is mostly driven by how much labour the return requires and how steeply the item depreciates between sale and resale.
| Category | True cost / value | Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Apparel (basic) | 20–28% | Low write-down, fast restock |
| Apparel (fashion) | 32–44% | Trend-cycle write-down |
| Electronics | 38–52% | Open-box discount, high handling |
| Furniture / large goods | 44–65% | Reverse freight, damage rate, refurb cost |
| Beauty / personal care | 62–95%+ | Hygiene restrictions, most returns destroyed |
Why the standard P&L hides this.
Most accounting setups put refunds on one line (“Sales returns”), reverse-shipping costs on another (“Shipping expense”), and restock labour somewhere inside warehouse operating expense. Quality write-downs and carrying costs typically aren’t accounted for at all on a per-SKU basis.
The result: the CEO sees an 8% return rate and feels comfortable. But the cost-of-returns line, if reconstructed end-to-end, runs 14–22% of revenue for a category like fashion apparel, large enough to be the difference between profit and loss on a $5M ARR brand.
How to measure your real number.
The minimum viable returns-cost framework:
- Pull every return event from your storefront (Shopify Refund objects, WooCommerce refunds, Magento credit memos) for the last 90 days.
- Match each to a return-shipping cost from your shipping platform.
- Apply a per-category restock labour rate, your 3PL invoice line items usually expose this.
- Apply a write-down assumption per category (the table above is a defensible starting point; refine with your own resale data).
- Sum and divide by net revenue over the same period.
Done correctly, this calculation typically delivers a number 1.8–2.7× the headline refund rate. That’s the number the CFO should be looking at.
Where the leverage lives.
Once you have the real number, the highest-leverage interventions are usually:
- Return reason clustering, when 60% of returns on a SKU are “size runs small,” the fix is to ship a sizing note, not to discount harder.
- Supplier batch tracking, quality defects often cluster by inbound batch. One brand recovered $11,400 in 30 days by traceing returns back to a single supplier batch.
- Pre-purchase friction calibration, adding 30 seconds to checkout (sizing guide, fit reviews) often pays back 3–8% in return-rate reduction.
The pattern: find why returns cluster, fix the root cause, watch the cost line shrink. Halia does the clustering automatically across your connected platforms.
Returns-cost questions, answered.
What's the average return rate for e-commerce?
NRF data puts US e-commerce return rate at 16.5% in 2025, vs. 9.0% for in-store retail. Apparel runs higher (24–30% typical), electronics lower (8–14%), beauty lowest (2–5% due to hygiene restrictions). The variance by category is large enough that benchmarks should always be category-matched.
Is the 20-65% true cost figure conservative or aggressive?
Conservative for fashion apparel and electronics; aggressive for hygiene-restricted categories where the return is destroyed. The framework assumes you can resell returned items at a discount. For categories where you can’t, the true cost approaches 100% of item value.
Should I offer free returns?
It depends on your category’s elasticity. Free returns increase conversion by 8–14% on apparel but also increase return rate by 22–35%. The net is positive for apparel; usually negative for low-margin categories like beauty or single-use goods. Run the math, don’t copy the policy.
How fast can I see my real returns cost?
If you have storefront + shipping + 3PL data connected, a tool like Instirio can compute this in 24–48 hours of first sync. Manually, expect a finance analyst 2–3 weeks to assemble the joins, label the labour rates, and produce a defensible per-SKU number.
Does
Halia replace my returns management software?
No. Halia is a detection layer on top of your existing returns flow (Loop Returns, Returnly, Aftership, etc.). Those tools manage the return;
Halia surfaces the patterns within returns that point to upstream fixes.
See these patterns on your store.
Connect in 5 minutes. First findings the same day. Free under $50K MRR.
Start free →