The rise of India’s “table for one” economy
TLDR:
India is slowly moving from family-based spending to individual spending.
More people are dining, travelling, watching, and shopping alone.
Businesses are adapting with solo-friendly products, services, and experiences.
Even small individual purchases are increasing the total number of transactions in the economy.
The Bite:
“Sometimes the biggest economic changes begin with the smallest decision: doing something alone.”
Not too long ago, eating alone in India carried a quiet stigma.
A person sitting by themselves at a restaurant table was often assumed to be waiting for someone, stood up by a friend, or simply lonely. Dining out was a social activity. Meals were meant to be shared, conversations were expected, and a “table for one” felt slightly out of place.
But that perception is slowly changing.
Across India’s cities, more people are showing up alone and perfectly comfortable doing so. They order a meal, open a laptop, read a book, or simply enjoy the moment without feeling the need to explain it.
At first glance, this may look like a small behavioural change inside cafés and restaurants. In reality, it reflects something much bigger. India is quietly entering a new phase of consumer behaviour, one where spending decisions are increasingly made by individuals rather than families.
Economists have a simple phrase for this emerging pattern: the solo consumption economy.
And it’s starting to get interesting.
Let’s start with the numbers.
For decades, India’s consumption model revolved around the family. One household bought one television, shared meals, shared subscriptions, and often made spending decisions together.
That structure is beginning to evolve.
Single-person households in India are slowly rising. About 17.4 million Indians lived alone in 2020, and by 2030 they could make up roughly 5.5% of all households. In a country with more than 300 million households, even that small share translates into millions of people making spending decisions independently.
But the more important shift is not just people living alone.
It’s people spending alone, even when they live with family.
Think about the difference between consumption twenty years ago and today.
For years, Indian consumption worked through the family unit. Big purchases were shared, meals were collective, and entertainment was experienced together.
Today the same household may have five smartphones, multiple OTT subscriptions, separate food orders, and individual travel plans.
The number of consumption decisions multiplies.
And that is exactly why companies are paying attention.
India is already one of the world’s largest consumer markets. The country’s retail sector is estimated to be worth around $1.3 trillion, and household consumption accounts for nearly 60% of India’s GDP. In other words, a huge part of India’s economy runs on everyday spending by consumers.
Which means even small changes in how people spend can ripple across the entire economy.
And one such change is now becoming visible.
One way to see this transformation is through India’s consumption data.
The Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (2022–23) shows that the average person now spends about ₹3,773 per month in rural areas and ₹6,459 in urban areas. Economists track this using MPCE (Monthly Per Capita Consumption Expenditure), a metric that measures how much individuals spend on average.
But the real insight appears when you look at where this money is going.
Spending patterns in rural and urban India are evolving differently.
In rural India, a large portion of consumption still goes toward essentials such as food, housing, and basic services. Yet even here, spending on consumer goods and mobility is rising. Ownership of items like two-wheelers, smartphones, and household appliances has grown significantly over the past decade, suggesting that individual consumption is slowly expanding beyond basic necessities.
Urban India tells a slightly different story.
Once basic needs are met, spending begins to shift toward lifestyle choices. According to consumption data, food now accounts for only about 40% of expenditure in urban households, with the rest going toward transport, housing, gadgets, entertainment, and services.
Technology has accelerated this shift.
India today has more than 800 million smartphone users, and hundreds of millions of people now consume entertainment, shopping, and services individually through their phones.
Streaming offers one of the clearest examples.
Twenty years ago, the entire family watched the same television show together. Today every individual has their own screen, their own algorithm, and their own content feed.
Once content consumption became individual, other forms of consumption began following the same pattern.
Food delivery is perhaps the most visible example.
India’s food delivery market is currently estimated at around $7–8 billion and is projected to reach $20–25 billion by 2030. A large portion of these orders are single-person meals.
The spending behaviour is revealing.
A family order might cost ₹800–₹1,200, but it happens occasionally. A solo order might be ₹250–₹400, but it happens several times a week.
For platforms like Zomato and Swiggy, frequency matters more than basket size.
Restaurants are adapting too. Many now offer single-meal combos, half-portion plates, bar seating, and counter dining designed specifically for solo customers.
Meanwhile, platforms like Swiggy Scenes are building ecosystems around solo-friendly activities such as pottery workshops, pickleball games, and silent book clubs.
This is part of a broader trend economists sometimes call community consumption.
People arrive alone, but participate socially once they are there.
Take pickleball as an example. In some urban clubs, about 85% of bookings come from individual registrations rather than group bookings. People sign up alone and end up meeting others through the activity.
Café culture reflects a similar shift.
India’s specialty coffee market is expanding rapidly and could cross ₹50,000 crore by 2030. Chains such as Blue Tokai, Third Wave Coffee, Starbucks, Tim Hortons, Subko, and Pret A Manger are aggressively expanding across major cities.
The behaviour pattern is simple.
One person orders one coffee and occupies a seat for 45 to 120 minutes, working, reading, or simply spending time alone.
In many cases, the experience itself becomes the product.
Travel is also undergoing a similar transformation.
The solo travel market in India is growing at roughly 19.5% CAGR between 2025 and 2030, and some platforms report that solo female travel bookings have grown nearly nine times year on year.
Interestingly, solo travellers are not budget backpackers anymore.
Data suggests they spend 25–30% more per trip than group travellers, often prioritising safety, convenience, and curated experiences. Travel companies are now building itineraries specifically for solo travellers heading to destinations such as Udaipur, Coorg, Sikkim, Rishikesh, and Spiti Valley.
Entertainment habits are evolving too.
BookMyShow reported that more than 1.8 million users attended movies alone last year.
What once felt socially awkward is slowly becoming normal.
Part of this shift is psychological.
For most of human history, being alone triggered anxiety because survival depended on belonging to a group. But modern psychology distinguishes between loneliness and solitude.
Loneliness is the feeling of being socially disconnected. Solitude is simply physical aloneness.
Increasingly, people are learning to enjoy that solitude.
For many urban professionals, solo consumption offers something valuable: autonomy.
After spending hours coordinating meetings, navigating traffic, and managing social obligations, the ability to eat what you want, watch what you want, or travel where you want without compromise becomes deeply appealing.
Scientists describe this through brain chemistry.
Group activities often trigger oxytocin, the hormone associated with bonding and social connection. Solo activities tend to trigger dopamine, the reward chemical linked to personal choice and instant gratification.
Cognitively, socialising also requires effort. Humans constantly try to interpret what others are thinking or feeling, a process psychologists call mentalizing. After a long day of social interactions, the brain naturally seeks cognitive rest. Solo activities provide that break.
Social media has also played an unexpected role.
Trends like #SoloDate and the idea of “main character energy” have turned solo activities into something aspirational rather than awkward. Eating alone at a beautiful café is no longer seen as sad. It often looks cinematic.
Restaurants have noticed this aesthetic shift.
Some establishments report that solo booths generate more Instagram tags than regular tables, simply because the setting feels visually appealing.
India is not the first country to experience this phenomenon.
Japan has lived with a solo consumption culture for decades. Nearly 40% of households in Japan are single-person households, and entire industries have emerged around this behaviour.
You can find one-person karaoke rooms, capsule hotels, solo barbecue restaurants, and ramen shops with individual dining booths where customers eat in complete privacy.
The cultural term for this lifestyle is Ohitorisama, which roughly translates to “party of one.”
South Korea has a similar concept called Honjok, referring to people who prefer doing activities alone. By 2023, more than 33% of households in South Korea were single-person households, leading to the rise of solo BBQ grills, single-serving ready meals, and compact apartments.
China has embraced what analysts call the single economy. By 2021, the country had more than 240 million single adults, and industries catering to them were estimated to be worth over $300 billion.
India is now entering a similar trajectory, but with an important twist.
Unlike Japan or Korea, India still has strong family structures. The change is not the disappearance of family life.
The change is the growing independence of consumption decisions within families.
A young professional may live with parents but still order food individually, subscribe to personal streaming platforms, shop online independently, and travel alone.
In other words, consumption is becoming both collective and individual at the same time.
Demographics are also accelerating this shift.
India has nearly 600 million people under the age of 35. This generation values independence, convenience, and experiences far more than previous generations. They spend on travel, gadgets, subscriptions, coffee, fitness, and hobbies.
And they spend more frequently.
Which explains why businesses are watching this trend closely.
Solo consumers tend to show higher purchase frequency, greater subscription spending, and more impulse purchases.
Perhaps that is the real story here.
India is not suddenly becoming a nation of people who want to be alone. It is becoming a country where people are increasingly comfortable doing things on their own terms.
And somewhere inside those ordinary choices, the shape of India’s consumer economy is quietly changing.
If you’ve made it this far, thanks for reading. We’ll be back next week, like clockwork.
Got a company, sector, or story you think we should dig into? Hit reply and tell us.
If we pick your suggestion, we’ll send some Filter Coffee merch your way.
Coffee Crew out.