Amazon Opens Prototype 1,800-Square-Foot Checkout-Free Grocery Store in Seattle

by Camren Skelton

Seattle — Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) has opened the first location of Amazon Go, an 1,800-square-foot mini grocery store in Seattle that allows customers to shop without waiting in checkout lines.

The store was open exclusively to Amazon employees for the past year.

The store is located less than a mile from Pike Place Market and the e-commerce giant’s headquarters. It offers ready-to-eat meals and snacks prepared by Amazon chefs, as well as grocery staples and artisanal baked goods. The offerings also include chef-designed meal kits.

Shoppers must have an Amazon account and the Amazon Go app, the latter of which enables entry into the store. Once inside, customers shop as they normally would and then simply leave. While there are no cashiers, there are employees working in the store who prepare food and check IDs on purchases of alcoholic beverages.

The store employs inventory-tracking technologies featuring cameras and motion sensors that automatically detect items being removed or returned to shelves. Shortly after shoppers depart, they receive a digital receipt and charges to their Amazon account.

Expansionary plans for the concept have not yet been released.

Amazon made major waves last June when the company announced it would acquire upscale grocery chain Whole Foods for $13.7 billion. The acquisition marked a noted increase in Amazon’s brick-and-mortar footprint, as well as its focus on grocery sales.

Amazon’s stock price closed at $1,294.58 per share on Friday, Jan. 19, up from $817.88 per share one year ago.

— Taylor Williams

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