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2026 · MAILogisticsLecture 4 min

Returns are an operation, not an afterthought

A return policy is a marketing promise. A returns process is an operation — and the gap shows up in margin, in customer trust, and on the warehouse floor.

Returns are an operation, not an afterthought

A return policy is a marketing promise. A returns process is an operation. Most retailers write the first carefully and improvise the second — and the gap shows up in margin, in customer trust, and on the warehouse floor.

The numbers most operators underestimate

When operators model unit economics, returns tend to enter as a small, fixed deduction — a rounding error against gross margin. The data has not agreed with that assumption for some years.

The headline rate hides a wide spread by category. A returns process built for the average will be wrong for most of what an apparel operation actually ships.

CategoryReturn rateLeading cause
Apparel & footwear25–40%Fit & sizing
Consumer electronics~13%Expectation gap
Home & general goods5–10%Damage in transit

Sizing alone accounts for roughly 34% of all e-commerce returns. That single line item is also one of the few that the operator can move with product photography, size guides, and category-specific tolerances — which is to say, it's controllable, and worth controlling, before it becomes a warehouse problem.

The strictest market sets the floor

For any operation selling into the European Union, the returns policy is not fully a commercial choice. Consumer law sets a floor beneath it.

A few practical consequences follow. If the consumer was not properly informed of the right, the 14 days extend by 12 months. Exceptions exist — perishables, sealed hygiene goods that have been opened, custom-made items — but they are narrow.

The operationally sound move is the same one we reach for across markets: design to the strictest applicable standard, then offer it everywhere. One policy is cheaper to run than five.

What customers actually check

A returns policy is not only a post-purchase document. It is consulted before the purchase by a clear majority of online shoppers, and it changes purchase decisions in measurable ways.

Two implications for the operation. First, the page surface that shows the returns terms is part of conversion, not part of customer service — it deserves the same care as the product page. Second, "free returns" is sufficiently load-bearing for conversion that pulling it back is a strategic decision, not a cost-saving one.

Designing the warehouse-side workflow

A returns process that lives only in the policy is fragile. The version that holds up under volume is the one that has been designed end-to-end on the warehouse floor.

Three operational anchors:

Inspection speed. Returned units sit on the floor until they are inspected, graded, and re-shelved or written off. Inspection that takes a week is inventory sitting idle for a week — and it is the variable that most often gets sacrificed when the warehouse is busy.

Grading accuracy. The grade decides whether a unit goes back to stock, to outlet, or to write-off. The operator's incentive is accurate grading; the warehouse's incentive is fast clearance. Without an explicit standard and an audit, the warehouse incentive wins.

The handoff back to inventory. Re-stocked units need to re-enter availability cleanly — same SKU, same condition flag, same cost basis — or they become phantom inventory that ships and creates a second return.

Returns are where the partnership reveals itself.

A partner that runs returns as a separate workflow with its own SLA and its own KPIs is a partner you can plan around. A partner that runs returns as overhead is one whose returns failures become your customer-experience failures.

What this adds up to

Treat the returns process as core operations, not as exception handling. Size it for the highest-return category in your range. Design it to the strictest legal floor you serve. Run one policy everywhere. Insist on an inspection-and-grading discipline that survives peak season.

The retailers that handle returns well make this look quiet from the outside — clean refunds, fast restocking, a service voice that does not negotiate. None of that is accidental.

Sources

  1. National Retail Federation — 2024 Consumer Returns report
  2. Directive 2011/83/EU on consumer rights — EUR-Lex
  3. Directive (EU) 2023/2673 — strengthened distance-contract rules
  4. GoDaddy 2024 retail survey — return-policy consultation behaviour
  5. Statista — most-returned product categories purchased online (2024)

Northwind Commerce · Notes opérationnelles · 2026 · MAI

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