Magicpin's AI assistant Vera hits 5 lakh merchants in 3 months

Key Takeaways

- Magicpin's AI assistant Vera reached 5 lakh merchants within three months of launch
- The company plans to double this to 10 lakh merchants by end of 2026
- Bengaluru leads adoption with 1.23 lakh merchants, followed by Delhi at 1.08 lakh
Magicpin's AI assistant Vera has onboarded over 5 lakh restaurants and retailers in just three months, and the company wants to double that number by the end of 2026. CEO Anshoo Sharma told PTI the pace of adoption has exceeded internal expectations, with the platform now active in over 300 cities across 25 business verticals.

Vera launched during the recent LPG crisis in India, a timing that forced many small merchants to rethink how they manage inventory and demand. The tool provides real-time order volume insights, helping restaurants and retailers plan operations before problems arise rather than react after the fact.
Where are merchants adopting Vera?
Bengaluru leads with 1.23 lakh active merchants on the platform. New Delhi follows at 1.08 lakh, then Hyderabad at 70,500, Mumbai at 68,500, Pune at 40,000, and Gurugram at 38,500. The concentration in tech-forward metros makes sense. These are markets where merchants already use digital tools for payments and delivery, so adding an AI layer to optimize operations is a smaller leap.
The more interesting signal is the presence in smaller markets. Magicpin claims traction outside the top six cities, though specific numbers for tier-2 and tier-3 towns were not disclosed. If Vera gains ground there, it would suggest India's fragmented retail sector is more ready for AI tools than many assumed.
What does Vera actually do for merchants?
The core function is demand forecasting. Vera analyzes order patterns and provides merchants with visibility into expected volumes. A restaurant can see if Tuesday lunch is trending higher than usual, or if weekend dinner orders are slowing. This data helps with staffing, prep, and inventory decisions.
“Vera is designed to be a co-pilot for restaurants and retailers, providing them with actionable, real-time insights that help them optimize their operations and manage demand more effectively.”
— Anshoo Sharma, Founder and CEO of Magicpin
The platform has facilitated over 50 lakh interactions across merchant workflows. Magicpin reports a 1.5x to 2x increase in visibility for merchants using Vera, and a 3x jump in customer actions driven by AI insights. These numbers come from the company, so treat them as directional rather than verified.
How much is Magicpin investing in AI?
The company has committed $1 million specifically toward building its AI stack, with Vera as the centerpiece. This is a modest sum compared to enterprise AI investments, but Magicpin is targeting small merchants, not Fortune 500 logistics. The bet is that a relatively lean AI product can deliver outsized value to businesses that currently operate on gut instinct and spreadsheets.
Sharma said the company is expanding Vera's capabilities into marketing, lead generation, and business intelligence. The roadmap suggests Magicpin wants Vera to evolve from an operations tool into a full merchant growth platform. Whether merchants will pay for these additional features, or whether they remain bundled into Magicpin's existing commerce services, is unclear.
Why the 10 lakh target matters
India has an estimated 14 million small retail outlets and over 7 lakh restaurants. Reaching 10 lakh merchants would give Magicpin meaningful coverage of the organized segment, the shops and restaurants digitized enough to use a platform like this. It would also create a data flywheel: more merchants feeding order data means better predictions for everyone on the platform.
The challenge is converting passive users into active ones. Many merchants sign up for tools and then abandon them. Magicpin claims 5 lakh are actively using Vera, but active use can mean anything from daily logins to occasional checks. The real test is whether these merchants change behavior based on Vera's recommendations.
Another platform scaling AI-driven merchant and customer engagement tools
The bigger picture for AI in Indian retail
India's small merchants have been promised digital transformation for a decade. Most of it focused on payments and delivery aggregation. AI is the next layer, and the question is whether it can actually change operations for businesses that often lack basic data hygiene.
Vera's early numbers suggest there is appetite. But early adopters are the easy part. The harder work is convincing the next 5 lakh merchants, the ones less tech-savvy and more skeptical, that an AI tool will improve their bottom line. Magicpin has until the end of 2026 to prove it can.
Logicity's Take
Magicpin's $1 million AI investment is modest, but that's actually the smart play. Indian SMBs don't need bleeding-edge models. They need simple tools that translate into cash register impact. The real competitive moat here isn't the AI sophistication. It's distribution. Whoever locks in merchant adoption first will own the data that makes the AI actually useful. The race is less about algorithms and more about feet on the street.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Magicpin Vera?
Vera is an AI assistant launched by Magicpin that provides restaurants and retailers with real-time order volume insights to help them manage demand and plan operations more effectively.
How many merchants are using Magicpin Vera?
Over 5 lakh merchants are actively using Vera across more than 25 business verticals in over 300 cities, as of the latest update from Magicpin.
What is Magicpin's target for Vera adoption?
Magicpin aims to onboard 10 lakh merchants on Vera by the end of 2026, doubling its current user base.
Which cities have the highest Vera adoption?
Bengaluru leads with 1.23 lakh merchants, followed by New Delhi (1.08 lakh), Hyderabad (70,500), Mumbai (68,500), Pune (40,000), and Gurugram (38,500).
How much has Magicpin invested in AI?
Magicpin has committed $1 million toward building its AI stack, with Vera as a key component of this investment.
Need Help Implementing This?
Exploring AI tools for your retail or restaurant business? Our team at Logicity can help you evaluate platforms like Vera and understand what fits your operational needs. Reach out for a consultation.
Source: Tech-Economic Times / ET
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
Related Articles
Browse all
Robotaxi Companies Are Hiding How Often Humans Take the Wheel
Autonomous vehicle firms like Waymo and Tesla are under scrutiny for refusing to disclose how often remote operators step in to control their self-driving cars. A Senate investigation reveals major gaps in transparency, raising safety and accountability concerns.

Wisconsin Governor Throws a Wrench in Age Verification Plans
Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers has vetoed a bill that would have required residents to verify their age before accessing adult content online, citing concerns over privacy and data security. This move comes as several other states have already implemented similar age check requirements. The veto has significant implications for the future of online age verification.

Apple's App Store Empire Under Siege: The Battle for the Future of Tech
The long-running feud between Apple and Epic Games has reached a boiling point, with Apple preparing to take its case to the Supreme Court. The tech giant is fighting to maintain control over its App Store, while Epic Games is pushing for more freedom for developers. The outcome could have far-reaching implications for the entire tech industry.

Tesla's Remote Parking Feature: The Investigation That Didn't Quite Park Itself
The US auto safety regulators have closed their investigation into Tesla's remote parking feature, but what does this mean for the future of autonomous driving? We dive into the details of the investigation and what it reveals about the technology. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found that crashes were rare and minor, but the investigation's closure doesn't necessarily mean the feature is completely safe.


