E-commerce major Meesho has approved its first acquisition since going public, signing a deal to bring kirana-focused B2B platform Kirana Club fully under its fold. Meesho announced that it has signed a share purchase agreement to acquire 100% stake in Kirana Club for a consideration of ₹202.08 crore, to strengthen its presence in the e-commerce ecosystem. Under the agreement, Meesho will acquire 100% of the share capital of Kirana Club and 0.41% of the share capital of RPLPL from the identified selling shareholders through three tranches.
The acquisition, with an aggregate transaction value of ₹202 crore, is expected to be completed in three tranches, on or before March 31, 2027. Meesho has a total market capitalisation of ₹76,791.64 crore as of June 12, 2026, according to data on the NSE. Shares of Meesho closed 0.84% lower at ₹166.92 per unit on the National Stock Exchange on Friday, June 12. However, the announcement was made after the market closed.
“Meesho will acquire Kirana Club and its subsidiary RPLPL for ₹202 crore in three tranches, marking its first acquisition since listing as it pushes deeper into India’s B2B grocery commerce space.”~Madhav Chanchani
What Meesho Is Buying: Kirana Club And Its B2B Marketplace Arm RPLPL
According to a regulatory filing, Meesho will acquire Kirana Club, a company incorporated under the laws of Singapore, and Retail Pulse Labs Private Ltd (RPLPL), a subsidiary of Kirana Club, which is incorporated under the laws of India. Kirana Club, incorporated in Singapore, develops proprietary software applications and operates a digital platform catering to grocery retailers. Its subsidiary, Retail Pulse Lab (RPLPL), operates a B2B e-commerce marketplace that connects kirana stores and small retailers with FMCG brands and distributors, primarily across Tier-2, Tier-3, Tier-4 cities and rural India. The platform generates revenue through commissions and advertising services.
Kirana Club operates an asset-light marketplace model that enables retailers to discover, compare and order FMCG and grocery products from brands and distributors. The platform also offers pricing insights, product discussions and scheme discovery features aimed at small retailers in non-metro markets. Founded in 2020 by Anshul Gupta and Aishwarya Jain, Kirana Club connects kirana shop owners with FMCG brands and distributors, primarily across Tier II to IV towns and rural India. It has 4.1 million registered retailers.
“Kirana Club will operate independently under Meesho. The acquisition gives Meesho a foothold in India’s B2B kirana commerce space, with Kirana Club’s founders Anshul Gupta and Aishwarya Jain continuing to lead the business.”~Investor Feed
Why This Deal Matters: Tapping Into A $650 Billion Grocery Opportunity
The strategic logic behind the acquisition centres on the sheer scale of India’s grocery and general trade market, a segment that Meesho’s core consumer marketplace has never directly addressed. The acquisition marks Meesho’s entry into the B2B commerce segment for kirana stores and expands its reach into India’s grocery and general trade ecosystem. According to the company, kirana and general trade channels account for more than 90% of India’s estimated $650 billion grocery market.
Meesho said it transformed internet commerce for consumers across Bharat through a capital-efficient third-party marketplace model. Kirana Club extends similar marketplace principles to small retailers by building a zero-inventory, zero-field-sales, asset-light B2B marketplace designed specifically for kiranas outside metro India.
Meesho’s leadership framed the deal as a natural extension of the company’s existing mission. “Kirana Club has built deep trust among small retailers through its asset-light and community-first approach,” said Vidit Aatrey, chairman, managing director and chief executive officer. “We see significant opportunities to strengthen access, transparency and product discovery for kiranas in underserved markets across India, and also extend this to all forms of B2B retail across India.”
Kirana Club’s co-founder echoed that alignment of vision. “Kirana Club was built on a simple belief: small retailers in Bharat deserve the same access, transparency, and efficiency as modern retail. Over the last few years, we have built deep trust with kirana retailers by combining community, local insights and commerce. Meesho understands Bharat at scale and shares our belief in serving underserved users through technology. With this partnership, we can accelerate our mission of building India’s most trusted digital commerce network for kiranas,” said Anshul Gupta, Co-founder and CEO of Kirana Club.
A Full Exit For Investors, Founders Stay On:
The transaction structure gives existing backers of Kirana Club a complete exit while preserving operational continuity under the founding team. The transaction provides a full exit to Kirana Club’s existing investors, while founders Anshul Gupta and Aishwarya Jain will continue to lead the business after the acquisition. The acquisition, valued at about ₹202 crore, provides a full exit to Kirana Club’s existing investors while retaining the company’s founders and operational leadership. Meesho said the deal would help extend its digital commerce infrastructure to kirana retailers across India.
On the financial performance side, the two entities being acquired are still in their early growth phase. For FY26, RPLPL reported revenue of ₹15.84 crore and a net loss of ₹30 lakh, while Kirana Club posted revenue of ₹33.27 lakh and a net loss of ₹5.37 crore. For FY26, Kirana Club reported a turnover of SGD 45,808.25, while RPLPL recorded a turnover of ₹15.84 crore.
The acquisition comes at a time when Meesho is rapidly growing as a freshly listed company. In the third quarter of FY26, Meesho recorded a revenue of ₹3,517.5 crore, a 32% annual rise, although losses increased nearly 13-fold. Following the acquisition, Kirana Club will operate independently inside the Meesho group. Bringing Kirana Club’s retailer network into the fold provides Meesho with a direct line into the supply side of India’s grocery trade, which had previously remained largely outside its core consumer marketplace business.




