UK online retailers bullish on 2026 as AI adoption transforms shopping and delivery
According to a new report from Metapack and Retail Economics, UK retailers are forecasting online sales growth to accelerate in 2026 as AI adoption expands to enhance shopping experiences and improve delivery performance, strengthening customer loyalty.
The research surveyed over 8,000 consumers and 400 retailers.
This is driven by rapid changes in consumer behaviour, with almost half of UK adults under 45 already using AI tools for e-commerce tasks such as product research, price comparison, and exploring delivery options. In response, retailers are increasing investment to keep pace, with 90% globally planning to boost spending on AI to optimise ecommerce operations over the next 12 to 24 months.
Globally, 78% of consumers used AI tools such as ChatGPT in the past 12 months, rising to 93% among those under 35. In the UK, this shift is reflected in shopping behaviour, with 30% of adults open to AI acting as a personal shopping agent, recommending products, checking delivery and returns options, and even making certain purchases on their behalf once preferences are set.
As a result, chat-based platforms including ChatGPT are emerging as a major retail channel, generating 50.2 million monthly shopping intent visits in the UK, ranking alongside the country’s biggest ecommerce sites.
“AI is changing the way people find, choose and buy products, as well as how they are delivered,” says Al Ko, CEO at Auctane, Metapack’s parent company. “Retailers who adopt AI now will get ahead. Those who hesitate will fall behind as AI reshapes every part of retail, from discovery to delivery.”
Across the eight international markets in the study, UK consumers stand out as the most confident in Europe when it comes to AI assisted e-commerce, with 64% expressing trust in AI tools. Retailers are increasingly using AI to optimise product discovery and fulfilment, improve warehouse efficiency and delivery speed, to directly impact customer satisfaction and online sales growth.
Retailers see AI as a key lever to drive growth and succeed in a competitive market, but adoption remains uneven. 36% of European retailers cite keeping pace with AI and emerging technologies as a major challenge for their business in 2026, compared with 33% in North America.
Barriers vary by size. Larger retailers (£500 million+ turnover) are more likely to point to skills gaps and the complexity of integrating AI with legacy systems (54%), while smaller firms (under £100 million turnover) cite high development costs (35%) and data security or compliance concerns.
These challenges are reflected in adoption maturity, with 28% of North American retailers having AI embedded and scaled across multiple functions, compared with just 17% of retailers in Europe, highlighting a competitive gap.
“AI is reshaping retail strategy, not just the customer experience,” says Richard Lim, CEO of Retail Economics. “Retailers clearly see the potential across conversion, delivery and customer experience, and consumers are increasingly comfortable with AI playing a role in how they shop. In 2026, the focus shifts from experimentation to execution, where success will be shaped by how effectively retailers can embed AI into their data, systems and everyday operations.”
Delivery performance, meanwhile, has shifted from a differentiator to a baseline expectation. Most UK shoppers now expect two-day delivery as standard, without paying extra. However, for faster or more convenient delivery on a typical £30–£50 order, £5–£8 is viewed as the optimum price range, with higher fees seen as poor value and more likely to deter purchases. Even as expectations continue to rise, cost remains the top delivery priority globally for 36% of shoppers.
Retailers are increasingly turning to AI to improve delivery execution. 38% of European firms identify speed, tracking, and proactive communication as the areas where AI can deliver the greatest impact. This is particularly critical for high value AI delegators, who make up 17% of shoppers and prioritise fast next day or paid same day delivery, highlighting how intelligent fulfilment can directly drive revenue and loyalty.
The report identifies four distinct AI driven shopper personas:
AI Delegators (17% of shoppers): Affluent time poor shoppers, often Millennials, who are happy letting AI take the lead, using it to discover, compare and even buy products on their behalf to save time and effort.
AI Collaborators (30%): Young, digitally savvy shoppers who use AI frequently as a trusted co-shopper, leaning on it to explore options and compare choices while retaining final control themselves.
AI Selectors (30%): Typically older consumers who engage with AI occasionally for information or reassurance, seeing it as a helpful assistant rather than a decision-maker.
AI Skeptics (23%): Cost-focused shoppers who make limited use of AI, prioritise low delivery prices over speed or innovation, and stick with familiar shopping habits.
Looking ahead, expectations for AI in retail continue to evolve. By 2030, 48% of shoppers expect AI to act as a helpful assistant across the shopping journey, while a further 25% anticipate it evolving into a trusted co-shopper that automates some decisions.
RTIH AI in Retail Awards
Brarista, IBM Consulting, Foundit!, Quorso, Vusion, Sensei, Reckon.ai, EE, Walkbase, Globant, Riskified, and Goddiva were among the winners at the RTIH AI in Retail Awards, sponsored by VenHub Global, 3D Cloud, EdTech Innovation Hub, and Retail Technology Show.
Our 2026 hall of fame entrants were revealed during a sold out event which took place at The Barbican in Central London on Thursday, 29th January, and consisted of a drinks reception, three course meal, and awards ceremony presided over by award winning comedian, actress and writer Lucy Porter.
In his welcome speech, Scott Thompson, Founder and Editor, RTIH, said: “According to Amazon’s Andy Jassy: AI is a once in a lifetime reinvention of everything we know, and the largest technology transformation since the cloud.”
“Whether that’s overstating it or not, we're certainly seeing an increasing number of innovative, potentially game changing developments in this space across both traditional and digital retail spaces. And that is reflected in tonight's finalists, who are boosting customer experiences and tackling retailers' painpoints across the likes of physical stores, online, omnichannel, supply chain, and payments.”
“To quote one of our judges: I have to admit, judging these awards was so difficult. So many that would have been worthy winners. And great to see how AI has moved firmly into delivery mode. Firmly into delivering for customers and driving huge innovation.”
Congratulations to our 2026 winners, and a big thank you to our sponsors, judging panel, the legend that is Lucy Porter, and all those who attended our Thursday, 29th January gathering.
Stay tuned for an indepth review of the awards ceremony in the next edition of RTIH magazine.
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