Where to buy

Where to buy 2026: who really matters between quick commerce, local retail and marketplaces

Table of Contents

European where to buy is no longer just a simple list of distributors. In 2026, brands need to deal with three realities that do not play the same role: quick commerce, local retailers and marketplaces. McKinsey highlights that distribution networks are becoming increasingly hybrid, with a strong expectation of fluidity across channels. NielsenIQ also shows that the digital shelf is becoming a central anchor for omnichannel performance. In other words, a brand can no longer treat every digital point of sale as if it served the same purpose.

The key takeaway

In Europe, the right where to buy map is not about stacking as many logos as possible. It is about directing each product to the right channel based on the purchase context: urgency, comparison, replenishment, local availability or the search for a specific price.

On the ground, the problem is simple. Many brands still think as if all digital retailers performed the same function. They do not. A quick commerce service is not there to tell the story of your full range. A marketplace is not there to secure your brand consistency on its own. A digitalized local retailer does not always have the catalogue depth of a pure player. If you ignore these differences, your omnichannel where to buy becomes a directory. Not a conversion lever.

What quick commerce really changes

European quick commerce has changed a lot since its early days. The phase of total promise, where everything had to be delivered within minutes everywhere, has given way to a more selective model. The players still in the market are focusing more on profitable areas, relevant baskets and use cases where speed has real value. For CPG brands, this changes the reading: quick commerce is not a universal channel, it is an immediacy channel.

In other words, it is especially useful for emergency purchases, impulse products, rapid repeat purchases or immediate needs. It is much less useful for products that require comparison, reassurance or range exploration. A brand that pushes all its references toward the same quick commerce partners often gets the logic wrong. It confuses presence with relevance.

The right use of quick commerce is therefore not about being everywhere. It is about knowing when it deserves to be activated in the journey. If the product answers an immediate need, speed becomes an advantage. Otherwise, the channel may mostly divert the user away from a more relevant retailer.

Why local retailers are moving back to the center

At the same time, local retailers are regaining a more strategic place in the European where to buy map. Not because they replace traditional e-commerce, but because they serve some real purchase decisions better: fast need, local purchase, simpler availability checks, pickup or geographic proximity. McKinsey describes this wider move toward omnichannel networks where the physical proximity layer and the digital layer need to work better together.

For a brand, this changes the coverage logic. Displaying major national e-retailers is no longer enough. Brands also need to identify which local players deserve a place in the journey depending on the country, the category and the purchase moment. In short, European retailer coverage is no longer measured only by the size of the retailers displayed, but by their actual usefulness in the journey.

This is exactly where this kind of setup becomes useful: it lets brands orchestrate that diversity without breaking the user experience.

Marketplaces do not play the same game

Marketplaces answer a different use case again. They are very strong when users want to compare, check availability, read reviews, make a quick trade-off between several options and find a price. They are powerful. But they also impose their own rules of visibility, competition and price pressure. A brand that treats them as a simple distribution relay misses the point.

In a where to buy Europe 2026 approach, the marketplace often plays a role in catalogue depth and purchase intent capture. It can be very effective in some categories and much less so in others. The right reflex is not to oppose it to other channels. The right reflex is to assign it the right role in the mix: comparison, broad availability, active search or cross-border coverage.

The issue is that many brands still let the marketplace become the default channel because they do not have a more refined strategy. That simplifies things in the short term. It often weakens the reading of the journey in the medium term.

Channel What it does well What it does less well
Quick commerce Answer urgency, emergency purchases and immediate needs Carry a broad range or a highly comparative purchase
Local retailers Combine local access, speed and geographic reassurance Offer the same catalogue depth everywhere
Marketplaces Compare, explore and quickly find an available offer Maintain brand and price consistency on their own

What brands need to map in 2026

The right European where to buy map does not start with channels. It starts with use cases. Which products answer an immediate need? Which ones require more comparison? Which markets are driven by marketplaces? Where does proximity remain decisive? Where does product availability become a real decision factor?

A brand that answers these questions properly can build a much stronger where to buy Europe strategy. A brand that does not do it lets chance or market habits decide in its place. And that chance costs performance.

  • Connect each product category to one or two dominant purchase use cases
  • Map the channels that are genuinely useful by country
  • Do not give the same weight to every distributor
  • Connect digital presence to real availability
  • Measure what becomes useful purchase intent, not just what generates a click

This is also why this data layer becomes an essential filter. Without it, the mapping remains theoretical.

What this changes for marketing management

When the channel map becomes more fragmented, marketing can no longer simply send traffic to a point of sale. It needs to understand which type of point of sale makes sense depending on the product, the market and the context. This is where reading purchase intent becomes more valuable than the raw volume of clicks. An exit toward a marketplace does not mean the same thing as an exit toward a quick commerce player or a local retailer.

In this context, Click2Buy illustrates a very concrete use case. The platform makes it possible not to treat every distributor exit as equivalent. It helps brands direct users toward the most relevant partners, read performance by channel and better understand what happens between exposure and purchase. This point becomes essential when channels play different roles.

The real European where to buy map in 2026 is therefore not a static map. It is a map of use cases. The brands that will move forward well will not be the ones displaying the most partners. They will be the ones that know when to activate quick commerce, when to push local proximity, when to let the marketplace play its role and how to keep everything readable for users as well as for their teams.

Why is European where to buy becoming more complex in 2026?

Because brands need to manage several channels, several purchase use cases and several distribution rhythms depending on the country.



How should a brand choose between quick commerce, local retailers and marketplaces?

By looking at where purchase intent is created, where the product is actually available and which channel best serves each category.



How many channels should really be included in a European where to buy strategy?

Three are often enough to start well: key retailers, useful local channels and the marketplaces that really matter for the category.

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Maxence Antao, Communications Officer at Click2Buy

Our role at Click2Buy is to guide our clients throughout the buying journey and optimize their marketing ROI using real-time retailer stock data.

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