Bengaluru Swiggy Instamart User Tips ₹68,600 in 2025, Setting National Record

A Swiggy Instamart customer in Bengaluru has set a national record by tipping delivery partners a total of ₹68,600 in 2025, the highest amount recorded by a single user across India. The insight comes from Swiggy Instamart’s annual consumer trends report, How India Instamarted 2025, which highlights changing behaviour in India’s fast-growing quick-commerce ecosystem.

Bengaluru Leads India in Quick-Commerce Tipping

According to the analysis released by Swiggy Instamart, Bengaluru emerged as the top city for individual tipping, reflecting the city’s deep adoption of quick-commerce services. The record-setting tipper stood out in a year when Instamart saw rapid growth in order volumes, especially for late-night and high-frequency grocery deliveries.

Chennai Follows with Strong Customer Participation

Chennai ranked second on the list, with customers in the city collectively tipping ₹59,505 over the course of the year. While no single user surpassed the Bengaluru record, the overall participation highlighted a growing culture of appreciation for delivery partners in southern metro cities.

Tipping Gains Ground in Quick Commerce

Traditionally associated with restaurants and ride-hailing platforms, tipping is still relatively new in the quick-commerce segment. However, Swiggy Instamart noted that 2025 marked a shift, with more customers choosing to tip delivery partners who navigate dense neighbourhoods, congested traffic and late-night orders to fulfil ultra-fast deliveries.

Changing Customer–Delivery Partner Relationship

The platform observed that tipping is increasingly becoming a signal of how deeply quick commerce is integrating into daily urban life. As consumers rely more on 10- to 15-minute deliveries for essentials, many are acknowledging the physical effort and time sensitivity involved, especially during peak hours and adverse conditions.

A Snapshot of Evolving Consumer Behaviour

Swiggy Instamart said the tipping trend reflects a broader evolution in customer mindset, where convenience is paired with empathy. As quick commerce continues to scale nationwide, such behavioural shifts indicate a maturing ecosystem where customers and delivery partners share a more human, respectful connection.

Conclusion

The ₹68,600 tipped by a single Bengaluru user is more than just a headline number, it underscores how India’s quick-commerce users are redefining everyday transactions. With tipping gaining traction, 2025 may be remembered as the year customers began actively recognising the people powering instant deliveries behind the scenes.

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