Operations

Why restaurants should be nervous about Amazon Fresh

The swiftly expanding grocery chain, which opened two new stores Wednesday, offers high convenience, low prices and a vast selection of ready-to-eat food.
Amazon Fresh
Photo by Heather Lalley

It’s 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, about 30 minutes before the grand opening of a new Amazon Fresh grocery store just outside Chicago, and an announcer is working the crowd, telling the hundreds of folks in line to return for lunch or dinner.

“Winner, winner chicken dinner,” he repeated. “Make sure you come back and get a hot slice of pizza at a cool price!”

Restaurants, of course, have no shortage of competition.

But it’s worth paying attention to the growing potential threat from Amazon Fresh, which opened two new locations on Wednesday alone (the other was New York’s first market, in Oceanside).

The supermarket chain from the retail Goliath opened its first location in August 2020 in Bellevue, Wash., and now has 34 stores in California, Illinois, Maryland, New York, Washington, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Washington, D.C.

It has future stores planned in California, Connecticut, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. An Amazon Fresh spokeswoman declined to say how many more markets would open this year and next, except to note that the chain is growing.

Inside the newest Amazon Fresh store in Norridge, Ill.


Grocery stores around the country, of course, have long offered prepared and ready-to-heat foods.

But the lure of Amazon Fresh is its almost over-the-top convenience and its low prices, especially for members of Amazon’s Prime rewards program (of which there are now more than 200 million around the world).  

The supermarket features what Amazon calls “Just Walk Out Shopping.” And it’s almost as seamless as that: Download the Amazon shopping app and scan the QR code it generates to enter the store’s gate. Load up the tech-enabled shopping cart with food and other items and scan the code again to exit and walk out the door.

Amazon says shoppers are able to skip the checkout line through “a combination of computer vision, sensor fusion and deep learning.”

But the store also has several traditional checkout lanes for shoppers who prefer the old school experience.

In Norridge, Ill., Wednesday morning, just about five minutes from the Chicago border, shoppers were presented with a veritable buffet of restaurant-quality foods.

An onsite sushi chef was preparing colorful rolls and poke bowls. A deli case brimmed with prepared salads, grilled salmon, meatballs and chicken tenders, across from a well-stocked salad bar. There’s a hot bar with mac & cheese, mashed potatoes and more, and pizza by the slice for under $2.

There’s a long case of grab-and-go sub sandwiches, we well as a selection of fresh-made hot and cold sandwiches for under $7.

Shoppers can grab a rotisserie chicken for $4.97.

Prime members score 20% off a different category of prepared foods each day of the week, from the hot soups bar on Wednesday to California rolls on Friday.  

The deals are notable, and especially enticing, given Tuesday’s federal report that food-away-from-home prices rose another 0.9% in June, up 7.7% this year, the highest rate since 1981. Restaurant prices meanwhile also hit a new 40-year high during the period.

Amazon’s ability to offer an extraordinary level of convenience, coupled with those low prices during a rough economic time, could very well entice shoppers to skip the drive-thru and pick up dinner from their local Fresh store.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

Despite their complaints, customers keep flocking to Chipotle

The Bottom Line: The chain continued to be a juggernaut last quarter, with strong sales and traffic growth, despite frequent social media complaints about shrinkflation or other challenges.

Operations

Hitting resistance elsewhere, ghost kitchens and virtual concepts find a happy home in family dining

Reality Check: Old-guard chains are finding the alternative operations to be persistently effective side hustles.

Financing

The Tijuana Flats bankruptcy highlights the dangers of menu miscues

The Bottom Line: The fast-casual chain’s problems following new menu debuts in 2021 and 2022 show that adding new items isn’t always the right idea.

Trending

More from our partners