FMCG Distribution in India: Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Distribution — Complete Guide
India’s FMCG distribution is the most complex consumer goods supply chain in the world. A single national FMCG brand might distribute to 9 million retail outlets across 640,000 villages, 7,935 towns, and every metro. The logistics infrastructure required to serve this market — reliably, cost-efficiently, and with cold chain for temperature-sensitive categories — is the central competitive challenge for every FMCG company in India.
The Three-Tier FMCG Distribution Model
Primary Distribution is the movement of goods from the manufacturer’s factory or central warehouse to regional depots, carrying and forwarding agents (CFA), and redistribution stockists. This is typically a full-truck-load (FTL) movement on long-distance lanes — Surat factory to Delhi depot, Mumbai factory to Kolkata CFA. Primary distribution is high-volume, low-frequency (weekly or fortnightly replenishment), and time-critical only to prevent stock-out at the depot level. SSL handles primary distribution with dedicated FTL fleet on 500+ active lanes, achieving 95%+ OTD with 2-hour vehicle placement SLA.
Secondary Distribution is the movement from regional depot or CFA to distributors — the critical link in the chain that determines brand availability at the distributor level across India’s 7,900+ cities and towns. Secondary distribution is part-truck-load (PTL) — smaller quantities, multiple delivery points, higher frequency (weekly replenishment typically). The quality of a brand’s secondary distribution is determined almost entirely by the density of its logistics partner’s PTL hub network. SSL’s 320+ location network with 13,850+ pincode coverage gives it one of India’s deepest secondary distribution footprints, particularly in Eastern and Central India markets where most national carriers rely on sub-contractors.
Tertiary Distribution is from distributor to retailer — the final mile to the 9 million kirana stores, chemists, modern trade outlets, and e-commerce fulfilment points. This is typically managed by the distributor’s own sales representatives and vehicles, though brands with modern trade and e-commerce channels increasingly require 3PL tertiary distribution support. SSL’s B2C last-mile capability, covering 13,850+ pincodes, extends into the tertiary distribution layer for e-commerce and Q-commerce channels.
Cold Chain FMCG Distribution — The Fastest Growing Segment
Ice cream, dairy, frozen food, and ambient-controlled grocery categories are growing faster than any other FMCG segment in India — and they require a fundamentally different distribution infrastructure. A warm truck delivering ice cream has a 100% loss rate. SSL’s 475 reefer trucks, operating at -25°C to +25°C across 320+ locations, provide the cold chain distribution backbone that FMCG brands entering or scaling these categories need.
How SSL Manages FMCG Primary and Secondary Distribution
SSL manages primary distribution for leading FMCG brands including HUL, Reckitt, Nestlé, and Amul — factory-to-depot FTL on national lanes, and depot-to-distributor PTL for secondary distribution across India’s tier-2 and tier-3 markets. SSL’s key advantage in FMCG distribution is the combination of FTL scale (for primary) and PTL depth (for secondary) under one partner, one SLA, and one invoice — eliminating the coordination cost of using separate primary and secondary distribution vendors.
