Early one morning, Tanisha Singh prepares a straightforward curry for her lunch while heading to work. Midway through, she discovers her tomatoes have run out, with onions already sizzling in the pan. Local markets remain closed at this hour, so she turns to her phone. A rapid-delivery app lists tomatoes as available, and within eight minutes, the doorbell sounds. The fresh produce arrives right at her door.
This seamless experience, once extraordinary in many places, now defines daily life in Delhi and other major Indian cities. Residents order everything from groceries and books to beverages and gadgets, all delivered in mere minutes. While not essential, this convenience has swiftly become a staple for urban dwellers.
Dark Stores: The Backbone of Quick Commerce
Unlike conventional supermarkets or far-off warehouses, services like Blinkit, Swiggy Instamart, and Zepto rely on compact ‘dark stores’ tucked into residential areas. These hubs sit just kilometers from users, enabling riders to zip deliveries home in minutes. Imagine a streamlined version of a bulk retailer—stocked with necessities but optimized for velocity, not customer browsing.
Goods inside stay invisible to shoppers, organized for rapid retrieval. Vegetables occupy dedicated zones, freezers hold perishables, and shelves brim with snacks, drinks, and pet supplies. Narrow aisles allow staff to navigate efficiently without collisions. When an order appears on screens, employees swiftly select items, scan them, and pack into branded bags with machine-like precision.
‘We finish in less than a minute,’ boasts store manager Sagar. Riders sync perfectly with packers at the counter, minimizing delays down to seconds.
A Rider’s High-Speed Journey
Muhammad Faiyaz Alam, a 26-year-old delivery driver, grabs a packed bag and heads out. His route spans 2.2 kilometers, projected at six minutes by the app’s map. He weaves through narrow streets, avoiding signals for efficiency. Yet, arrival isn’t straightforward in Delhi’s labyrinthine neighborhoods, where maps falter amid similar buildings and vague addresses. Landmarks like ‘near the blue gate’ or ‘behind the pharmacy’ guide the way.
Here, the drop-off points to ‘near a public bank ATM,’ hidden from view. Alam phones the customer for directions and locates the entrance. The full cycle—from order to delivery—clocks in at 16 minutes. For his effort, he pockets 31 rupees (about $0.30). Without pause, he races back, as another task awaits.
Alam aims for 40 deliveries daily, netting 900 to 1,000 rupees after expenses on good days. Pay varies with demand, distances, and app bonuses, reflecting India’s booming gig economy, forecasted to support 23.5 million by 2030.
The Grind of Gig Work
These roles echo longstanding low-wage labor in India, but apps have scaled it into an algorithm-driven force. Riders like Alam operate as independent partners, lacking fixed wages, leave, or benefits. Government pledges for protections linger unimplemented.
Workers secure ‘gig slots’ via apps, chasing ‘streak’ bonuses for volume and endurance. In December, Alam added 16,000 rupees in incentives from over 1,000 orders across 406 hours. Disruptions, like his recent phone theft after 12-hour shifts, erase progress. ‘I felt down for days,’ he shares, ‘but standard pay kept me going.’
Researcher Vandana Vasudevan notes this model’s intensity stems from contractor status and scant safeguards. ‘Algorithms dictate via ratings, fines, and earnings, without security nets,’ she explains. Riders often speed, dodge traffic, or skip lights to meet deadlines, risking complaints or reprimands.
Recent strikes in multiple cities highlighted declining pay, erratic bonuses, and hazards. Authorities mandated platforms to abandon ’10-minute’ pledges, easing some pressure, though experts doubt major shifts for workers.
Why Quick Delivery Thrives in India
The sector surged post-pandemic, as lockdowns favored home orders over bustling markets. Globally, services like Getir peaked then faded with reopenings. India diverged, embracing fixed timelines without premiums—ordering even a lone avocado proves viable, albeit pricier than local buys.
Urbanites, burdened by commutes, prioritize time savings, fueling growth in metros, per Technopak partner Ankur Bisen. ‘It serves time-strapped professionals avoiding extra outings,’ he says. Yet, quick commerce claims a minor retail slice, with profitability elusive amid cutthroat rivalry and discounts.
For users like Singh, it’s habitual. ‘I could manage without it,’ she admits, ‘but convenience blinds us to the labor involved.’
Shifting Attitudes Toward Speed
Awareness grows: A LocalCircles survey shows 74% back ditching ultra-fast claims, with 40% open to longer waits. Whether this sparks real reform stays unclear. India’s urban pulse races on, powered by riders with few alternatives.

