There was a period, not too long ago, when the D2C playbook was almost embarrassingly simple. Raise capital, spend aggressively on performance marketing, and acquire customers at whatever cost the funding round could sustain. Report GMV. Raise more capital. And the underlying economics, whether the business actually made money on each transaction, whether customers were coming back without being bribed to, whether the brand had built anything that would survive a reduction in ad spend, those questions got pushed to later, to the next stage, the next raise, the next year.
That deferral is no longer available. The growth-at-all-costs era of Indian D2C is over, and 2026 is the year the industry will separate, with uncomfortable clarity. Separating the brands that built real businesses from the ones that built impressive-looking revenue lines sitting on top of structurally broken economics.
What the Last Five Years Actually Built
To be fair to the brands that chased growth aggressively, the environment rewarded it. Capital was cheap, investor appetite for D2C was strong, and that post-pandemic surge in online shopping created genuine tailwinds, where customer acquisition looked more efficient than it actually was. Brands that might have struggled to build a sustainable acquisition funnel in normal conditions found themselves growing quickly in a market that was temporarily more receptive to online purchasing than at any previous point.
The problem is that rapid growth in a favourable environment is a very poor teacher. It doesn’t tell you whether the product is genuinely differentiated or just well-distributed. It doesn’t reveal whether customers are loyal or just convenient. And it doesn’t test whether the margin structure can survive normalisation of customer acquisition costs, platform fees, return rates, and the discounting that became habitual during the growth phase.
So now those tests are being run in real time, and the results are here. Brands that grew quickly and cleanly, kept pricing integrity, built repeat purchase behaviour that’s real, and kept acquisition costs proportional to lifetime value, are finding the current environment navigable. Meanwhile, brands that used capital to paper over structural problems are discovering that the paper doesn’t hold once the capital stops.
The Unit Economics Conversation That Got Postponed
Unit economics in D2C isn’t a complicated idea, but it shows uncomfortable truths when you look at it closely. The basic question is simple: on a fully-loaded basis, cost of goods, customer acquisition, fulfilment, returns, platform fees, and a fair allocation of fixed costs, does the business make money on each customer over a reasonable time horizon?
For a good chunk of India’s D2C brands, the honest answer is no, or not yet. Customer acquisition costs on Meta and Google have climbed a lot as more brands compete for the same attention. Quick commerce platforms introduced distribution channels with structural commission rates that compress margins before any other cost is applied. Return rates in categories like fashion and electronics have stayed stubborn. And the repeat purchase rates that were supposed to make the economics work over time have been lower than the optimistic cohort projections that people relied on.
None of this means D2C as a model is actually broken. It means D2C needs the same financial rigour as any other sustainable business, and that rigour got deprioritised during the growth phase in ways that are now showing up, fully, in the present.
What Investors Are Actually Asking in 2026
The shift in investor posture toward D2C brands is one of the clearest signs that the era really has changed. The conversations happening in funding rounds now are structurally different from those in 2020 or 2021.
Contribution margin, revenue minus variable costs, before fixed overhead, is now treated like a baseline expectation, not a nice-to-have. Investors want it positive, ideally at the order level. They also want to understand the trajectory clearly enough to model when the business crosses into full profitability. GMV without a margin context gets received with scepticism, not enthusiasm.
Customer cohort behaviour is being inspected in the same way. Like, how much revenue does a customer acquired in Q1 generate by Q4? What percentage are still active after twelve months? These questions are not new, smart investors are always asking them. But the bar for acceptable answers has moved a lot.
Cohorts that seem healthy on thirty-day retention but fall apart at ninety days are being read correctly as acquisition-driven businesses rather than retention-driven ones.
So the brands getting funded here, and the ones generating real acquisition interest, are those that can show a clear, honest picture of where the money goes and where it comes from. Not the best-case scenario. The base case, with assumptions visible.
How the Brands that are Winning Have Been Repositioning
Across the D2C landscape, something pretty noticeable is occurring, the same kind of move again and again from the brands that are handling this environment better than most.
First, there’s a ruthless rationalization of channel spend. Performance marketing still matters, but the brands doing it well are treating customer acquisition cost like an actual discipline, not just a button to press for more volume. They set thresholds by channel and cohort, they cut spend that doesn’t hit them, no matter how much volume it could generate, shifting money toward channels with lower acquisition costs. Owned channels like email, WhatsApp, and community are being built with urgency, because the economics of reaching someone you already have are categorically better than the economics of chasing a new buyer.
Second, product portfolio discipline. During the growth era, brands leaned into extension, like adding more SKUs, and categories for customers to buy. Now, a tighter focus on fewer products with stronger margins, clearer differentiation, and better repeat purchase behavior is key. Brands that once launched into multiple categories suddenly realised that two or three truly good products in one familiar category can be a more profitable setup.
Third, pricing integrity. Discount-led acquisitions defined the growth era and trained customers to buy during promotions. So customers become promotion-conditioned, and resistant to paying full price. Undoing that conditioning is painful , it often means short-term volume loss, but the brands that have actually done it are finding the remaining buyers are way more valuable than the ones who walk away.
What 2026 Actually Rewards (and why it’s not just growth)
The D2C brands that will end up defining the next phase of the category’s development in India aren’t automatically the ones with the most impressive growth stories. It’s more about whether they can prove the business they built is worth owning: customers and margins that are real, and a competitive position that still feels defensible without needing continuous capital injection just to hold it together.
That’s a tougher build than a revenue line. It asks for patience with growth rates, honesty about what the economics are actually saying, and the willingness to take decisions that hurt because they’re correct for the structure of the business, not just for the next dashboard.
The growth-at-all-costs era produced a lot of brands visibility. 2026 will make the split obvious, which of them built something that lasts, and the answer, almost entirely, will come down to whether the unit economics were ever truly real.
(Views are personal)
















