What is Upselling

Upselling is the practice of encouraging customers to purchase a more premium, upgraded, or higher-value version of the product they’re already considering. It typically involves highlighting added features, improved performance, or larger sizes to increase the total order value.

Examples

Original product Upsell suggestion
Basic drip coffee maker Premium model with built-in grinder and timer
Mid-range running shoes High-performance version with advanced cushioning
Standard desk chairs Ergonomic chairs with adjustable lumbar support

A brief history

Upselling has been around long before ecommerce; it’s a classic sales tactic from the in-store world. Think of a fast-food cashier asking, “Would you like to make that a combo?” or a car dealer pointing out a model with heated seats and better mileage.

As shopping moved online, the technique evolved with it. Today, upselling happens through product pages, checkout flows, recommendation engines, and email campaigns, all designed to offer more value while boosting average order value.

Good to know

Upselling works best when it feels helpful, not pushy. It’s most effective when the offer is clearly related to what the shopper is already interested in, whether it’s a higher-tier version of the product or a bundle that adds more value.

Timing matters too: showing upsell suggestions on product pages, in the cart, or post-purchase can all work well, just be sure the benefit to the customer is obvious.

Know more

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the difference between upselling and cross-selling?
Upselling encourages a customer to upgrade or choose a more premium version of the product they’re considering. Cross-selling suggests related or complementary items. Both aim to increase average order value but use slightly different strategies.
When is the best time to upsell?
It depends on your product and audience, but common moments include: On the product page, show upgraded versions or bundles. In the cart, highlight premium alternatives before checkout. After purchase via email or confirmation pages, offer add-ons.
How do I make upselling feel helpful, not pushy?
Keep it relevant and value-driven. The upgrade should clearly benefit the customer, like more features, longer shelf life, or better performance. Use straightforward language and show why the upsell makes sense.