Profit Intelligence

AOV (Average Order Value)

2026-04-12 7 min read Profit Intelligence
AOV (Average Order Value) — Total revenue divided by the number of orders in a given period. AOV measures how much a customer spends per transaction on average. It is one of three levers that drive revenue — alongside traffic and conversion rate — and directly affects CAC payback, ROAS thresholds, and unit economics.
TL;DR: AOV is revenue divided by orders. For D2C e-commerce, median AOV ranges from $45-$65 for consumables to $120-$250 for apparel. Increasing AOV by even 10% compounds through every downstream metric — ROAS, CAC payback, and LTV (Shopify, 2025).

What is average order value (AOV)?

Average order value (also called AOV, average basket size, or average transaction value) is the mean dollar amount spent per order across all transactions in a period. It is calculated by dividing total revenue by total number of orders — not total number of customers, which is a different metric.

AOV is one of the simplest levers in the revenue equation: Revenue = Traffic x Conversion Rate x AOV. Increasing any of these three numbers grows revenue. AOV is often the cheapest to improve because it requires no additional ad spend or traffic acquisition — the customer is already buying.

For D2C e-commerce, healthy AOV depends heavily on category. Consumables and supplements typically run $40-$70. Apparel and accessories range from $80-$180. Home goods and furniture can exceed $300. B2B SaaS doesn't use AOV in the traditional sense — average contract value (ACV) or average deal size serves the same function.

AOV is not the same as LTV. AOV measures a single transaction. LTV measures the total revenue from a customer across all transactions over the entire relationship. A customer with $60 AOV who orders 8 times has an LTV of $480.

Why AOV matters for operators

AOV determines whether your acquisition economics work. A company with $120 AOV and $40 CAC recovers acquisition cost in the first order. A company with $45 AOV and $40 CAC needs 2-3 orders before the customer becomes profitable. The difference between first-order profitability and multi-order dependence changes every strategic decision.

When AOV drops, it cascades. A 15% AOV decline means ROAS drops proportionally on the same ad spend. CAC payback period extends. Contribution margin per order shrinks because fixed fulfillment costs stay constant. A $12 shipping cost on a $120 order is 10% of revenue. On a $75 order, it's 16%.

Operators who segment AOV by channel often find 20-30% variance. Customers from Google Shopping might average $95 AOV while social media traffic averages $62. This changes how you evaluate ROAS per channel — the high-AOV channel can tolerate higher CPCs because each conversion generates more revenue.

AOV formula

AOV = Total Revenue / Total Number of Orders

Example:
- Total revenue in March: $312,000
- Total orders in March: 2,400

AOV = $312,000 / 2,400 = $130.00

Average order value is $130.00.

What each component means:

  • Total revenue: Gross revenue from all orders in the period. Some operators use net revenue (after returns and discounts) for a more accurate number — called "net AOV."
  • Total orders: Number of completed orders, not number of customers. One customer placing 3 orders counts as 3 orders.

Net AOV variant:

Net AOV = (Total Revenue - Returns - Discounts) / Total Orders

Example:
- Gross revenue: $312,000
- Returns: $34,320 (11%)
- Discounts applied: $15,600 (5%)
- Net revenue: $262,080
- Orders: 2,400

Net AOV = $262,080 / 2,400 = $109.20

AOV benchmarks by industry and channel

How AOV varies across e-commerce categories and acquisition channels.

SegmentMedian AOVTop quartileBottom quartileKey driver
D2C consumables / supplements$45-$65$80+Below $35Subscription bundles lift AOV
D2C apparel / accessories$95-$150$180+Below $70Upsells and size of wardrobe purchase
D2C home / furniture$200-$400$500+Below $150High unit price but low frequency
B2B SaaS (monthly plans)$150-$500/mo$800+/moBelow $100/moSeat count and tier selection
B2B SaaS (annual contracts)$5,000-$25,000/yr$50,000+/yrBelow $3,000/yrEnterprise vs. SMB mix

Sources: Shopify Commerce Trends 2025, Littledata E-commerce Benchmarks 2025, industry-observed ranges based on operator reports.

Common mistakes when tracking AOV

1. Using AOV as a standalone metric without margin context

A $200 AOV with 20% gross margin produces $40 in gross profit per order. A $100 AOV with 65% gross margin produces $65. The lower AOV is more profitable per order. Always pair AOV with margin data.

2. Averaging AOV across all channels

A blended AOV hides critical variance. If email customers average $145 and paid social averages $72, the blended $108 describes neither group accurately. Segment AOV by channel, customer type (new vs. returning), and device to make allocation decisions.

3. Inflating AOV with discounts that destroy margin

"Spend $100, get 20% off" increases AOV from $75 to $100 — but contribution margin drops from $30 to $16. The AOV improvement is real, but the margin impact is worse. Measure the net effect: did the AOV increase produce more total contribution dollars?

4. Ignoring AOV trends over time

A slowly declining AOV is often the first sign of product-market fit erosion or price sensitivity. Track AOV on a rolling 30-day basis. A 5% monthly decline compounds to 46% annual decline. Catch it in month 2, not month 8.

How Fairview tracks AOV automatically

Fairview's Margin Intelligence pulls transaction data from your payment processor (Stripe) and e-commerce platform (Shopify) to calculate AOV by channel, customer segment, and time period. AOV is displayed alongside contribution margin per order — so you see both the size of the order and the profit it produced.

The Operating Dashboard trends AOV over time and segments it by acquisition source. When AOV drops more than 10% from prior period, the Next-Best Action Engine flags the change: "AOV from Meta Ads traffic dropped 14% month-over-month. Check whether new creative is attracting lower-value buyers."

See how Margin Intelligence works

AOV vs LTV (lifetime value)

AOV (Average Order Value)LTV (Lifetime Value)
What it measuresRevenue per single transactionTotal revenue from a customer over the full relationship
Time horizonOne orderEntire customer lifespan
Repeat purchasesNot includedIncluded — LTV accounts for all future orders
Best forPer-order economics, pricing decisionsLong-term customer value, CAC justification

AOV measures one moment. LTV measures the full arc. A customer with $60 AOV who orders monthly for 2 years has an LTV of $1,440. Both metrics are needed — AOV for near-term cash flow and pricing; LTV for acquisition investment and retention strategy.

FAQ

What is AOV in simple terms?

AOV is the average amount a customer spends per order. Divide your total revenue by your total number of orders in any period. If you made $200,000 from 1,600 orders last month, your AOV is $125. It tells you how much each transaction is worth on average.

What is a good AOV for e-commerce?

It varies by category. D2C consumables: $45-$65 is median. Apparel: $95-$150. Home goods: $200-$400. The better question is whether your AOV covers acquisition cost in the first order. If CAC is $50 and AOV is $120 with 50% margin, first-order profit is $10. That's tight but viable.

How do you increase AOV?

Five practical approaches: bundle products (create "starter kits" or "complete sets"), add a free shipping threshold above current AOV, offer quantity discounts on multi-item purchases, cross-sell complementary products at checkout, and introduce a premium tier or upgrade option. Test one at a time and measure net margin impact, not just AOV lift.

What is the difference between AOV and ACV?

AOV is average order value — one transaction. ACV is annual contract value — the total yearly value of a subscription or contract. E-commerce uses AOV. B2B SaaS uses ACV. They serve the same function: measuring the revenue produced by a single buying event.

How often should you track AOV?

Weekly for operational monitoring — catch drops before they compound. Monthly for strategic reporting and board updates. Segment by channel and customer type at the monthly level. Daily AOV is too volatile for decisions but useful for detecting anomalies like a pricing error or broken checkout flow.

Does AOV include returns and refunds?

Standard AOV uses gross revenue. Net AOV subtracts returns and refunds before dividing by orders. Net AOV is more accurate for unit economics and margin analysis. If your return rate is above 10%, the gap between gross AOV and net AOV is significant enough to change allocation decisions.

Related terms

Fairview is an operating intelligence platform that tracks AOV by channel and segment — alongside contribution margin, ROAS, and LTV. Start your free trial →

Siddharth Gangal is the founder of Fairview. He built per-channel AOV tracking into the platform after seeing operators optimize for conversion rate while AOV quietly declined 30% over two quarters.

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