Designing a My Cart Screen That Reduces Checkout Anxiety
The cart screen is where many good shopping experiences quietly fail.
When designing this My Cart screen, I treated it as an emotional checkpoint, not a summary page. Users arrive here with intent—but also doubt. So every design decision focused on reducing anxiety and reinforcing trust.
Product cards are clean and editable. Users can adjust quantities or remove items without leaving the screen, which keeps them in control. Pricing is broken down into clear components: product subtotal, delivery, discounts, and final total. No surprises. No hidden costs.
The promo code input appears before the total, reinforcing value at the exact moment users evaluate price. The Checkout button is visually strong but calm, anchored so the next step is always obvious without being aggressive.
Good UX doesn’t push users to buy. It reassures them they already made the right choice.
Which moment in your checkout flow do users hesitate the most?

















