India’s quick-commerce industry could be heading toward one of its biggest moments yet. Zeptothe startup that became synonymous with 10-minute grocery delivery, is reportedly preparing for a blockbuster initial public offering (IPO) that could raise as much as $1 billion.
The move would not only mark a defining chapter for the company but could also reshape investor confidence in India’s startup ecosystem at a time when public market activity has slowed sharply.
Credits: Bloomberg
According to people familiar with the matter, Zepto is preparing to publicly file its IPO papers in the first half of June. Investor roadshows are expected to begin later next month, while the public issue itself could launch as early as July.
The offering is expected to include a combination of fresh shares and secondary stake sales by existing investors. The fresh capital raised will likely be directed toward expanding Zepto’s operations, strengthening its dark store network, and accelerating growth in India’s increasingly crowded quick-commerce market.
While the exact size and timing of the IPO are still subject to change, the potential listing already signals how aggressively Zepto is positioning itself for the next phase of growth.
Founded just a few years ago, Zepto has rapidly transformed from a challenger startup into one of India’s most valuable consumer internet companies. The company achieved a valuation of $7 billion during its $450 million funding round in October, underlining strong investor confidence despite broader market caution.
Its rise has been fuelled by India’s growing appetite for ultra-fast deliveries. What started as grocery delivery has evolved into a broader convenience ecosystem where consumers expect everything — from snacks and beverages to electronics and daily essentials — delivered within minutes.
Zepto’s ability to scale rapidly while building brand recall among urban consumers has helped it compete directly against some of the biggest names in the industry.
The IPO plans come at a time when competition in India’s quick-commerce space is fiercer than ever.
Zepto is battling rivals including Swiggy, Zomato, Amazon’s India operations, and BigBasketwhich is backed by the Tata Group.
The sector has become one of India’s hottest consumer battlegrounds, with companies investing heavily in warehouses, logistics, delivery fleets, and customer acquisition. Fast deliveries have increasingly become less of a luxury and more of a consumer expectation in urban India.
However, the race has also raised concerns about profitability. Quick-commerce firms continue to spend aggressively to maintain market share, leading investors to closely monitor how companies balance growth with financial discipline.
Zepto’s planned share sale could become only the second billion-dollar IPO in India this year, following the planned listing of SBI Funds Management.
That makes the offering especially significant at a time when India’s IPO market has lost momentum. Companies in India have raised roughly $3.5 billion through IPOs so far in 2026 — far below the record fundraising levels seen over the previous two years.
Investor caution has grown amid global economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions, including concerns surrounding the Iran conflict. Against this backdrop, Zepto’s IPO will likely be viewed as a major test of public market appetite for high-growth Indian startups.

Credits: TechCrunch
Zepto is reportedly working with a powerful lineup of bankers for the offering, including Axis Capital, Motilal Oswal Investment Advisorsand the Indian units of Morgan Stanley, HSBCand Goldman Sachs.
The startup had confidentially filed draft IPO documents in December and reportedly received regulatory observations on May 10, moving it one step closer toward the public markets.
For Zepto, the IPO is more than a fundraising event. It is a chance to prove that India’s quick-commerce boom can evolve from a cash-burning startup race into a sustainable public-market business story.