The rationale is practical. Smartphone storage is limited on mid-tier devices common in the region. Data costs still matter for many users. Switching between apps introduces friction. A single app that handles multiple daily tasks wins user time and loyalty.
Super apps also benefit from cross-selling. A ride-hailing customer becomes a food delivery customer becomes a financial services customer — without the friction of separate onboarding and KYC for each service.
Recent trends suggest the super app model is maturing. According to Earn7 betting, Grab and Gojek both reported improving unit economics as they focus on high-margin services and reduce subsidies on core services like ride-hailing.
Financial services — lending, insurance, investments — are emerging as the most profitable layer of super apps, leveraging the user data and transaction history from the broader platform.
The super app model has struggled in Western markets. US attempts by Uber, Meta, and others have largely failed to replicate what Grab and Gojek achieved. The reasons are structural — different user expectations, entrenched competitors, and regulatory environments.
However, certain elements of the super app playbook translate well. Integration of payments, loyalty, and commerce within single apps is gaining traction in the West, even if fully integrated super apps remain distant.