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AP News covered SureBright's research on how time influences customer shopping patterns
May 13, 2026

AP News covered SureBright's research on how time influences customer shopping patterns

NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES, April 28, 2026 - SureBright, a leading provider of product protection and extended warranty solutions for e-commerce merchants, released new research on U.S. online shopping behavior. The study finds that shoppers are most likely to buy during a concentrated midday window (36%), not in the evenings (20%). That’s a 2:1 reversal to what many retailers assume. The findings challenge a core assumption behind how many e-commerce brands schedule marketing, staffing, and operations.

The white paper “When Do U.S. Shoppers Buy?” analyzed a sample data set of more than 1.1 million anonymized U.S. orders placed across SureBright’s merchant network over a 12-month period. The analysis found that over 36% of all daily U.S. e-commerce orders occur between 11:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. By contrast, the evening hours of 6:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m., a period many merchants treat as peak time, account for fewer than 20% of daily orders.

“The evening shopping peak is a myth,” said Manish Chauhan, CEO, SureBright. “Our data shows U.S. buyers converting hardest between 11 and 3, and it isn’t close. Any merchant whose marketing calendar, staffing plan, or fulfillment cut-off still centers on 8 p.m. is losing sales before lunch is even over.”

Key findings include:

Midday dominates: Noon and 1:00 p.m. are the two busiest individual hours of the day, each accounting for 7.5% of daily orders. Together, the four-hour midday window (11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.) generates over 36% of daily volume.

Mobile and desktop peak at different times: Desktop shopping peaks sharply at noon (8.3% of desktop orders), while mobile, which accounts for more than half of all orders at 50.4%, peaks later at 4:00 p.m.

Device-specific scheduling matters: The four-hour gap between desktop and mobile peaks suggests merchants need device-specific campaign schedules rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.

High-value purchases happen earlier in the day: Premium orders over $1,000 peak at 11:00 a.m., two full hours before budget purchases under $200 peak at 1:00 p.m. The research suggests that consumers making expensive, research-intensive buying decisions are most active during late morning.

Evening is the weakest major window: After 6:00 p.m., hourly order volume drops to 4.8% or less per hour, well below the noon peak of 7.5%.

The findings carry operational implications that go well beyond marketing. SureBright’s analysis recommends that merchants align customer service staffing, site performance infrastructure, and fulfillment cut-off times with the midday surge rather than anticipating an after-work rush that the data does not support.

The full white paper, including hourly distribution charts and device-level breakdowns, is available at SureBright's official website.

Originally published here- https://apnews.com/press-release/ein-presswire-newsmatics/the-8-pm-shopping-rush-doesnt-exist-study-of-1m-orders-shows-u-s-e-commerce-peaks-at-lunch-3f581dd678475f865cf3a89c2f2d44ba

E-commerce Trends, Online Shopping Behavior, Consumer Buying Habits, Retail Analytics
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