Amazon Is Offering a New Grocery Delivery Subscription Service — Here’s How It Works

Groceries from Whole Foods and local shops will arrive in an hour, and the new delivery subscription is discounted for customers with EBT cards.

By Sherin Shibu Apr 23, 2024

Key Takeaways

  • Amazon announced a grocery store delivery subscription on Tuesday.
  • It offers benefits including unlimited free deliveries on orders above $35 and one-hour deliveries where applicable.
  • Amazon is currently offering a free 30-day trial of the service across 3,500 U.S. cities and towns.

If you’re a fan of Whole Foods Market and Amazon Fresh delivery, Amazon’s new grocery subscription might make things a little cheaper.

U.S.-based Amazon Prime members, who already pay $15 a month for a Prime membership, can now access an added $10 grocery subscription that makes deliveries on orders from Amazon Fresh, Whole Foods, and local grocery stores free for orders above $35.

The subscription covers specialty stores like Rite Aid and Pet Food Express. Depending on the area, the delivery could arrive within an hour at no extra cost.

Prime subscribers can already get food delivered through Amazon — but without the added grocery subscription, they have to pay $9.99 in delivery fees for every Amazon Fresh order below $50 and $7 in fees for orders from $50 to $100. Amazon Fresh deliveries above $100 are free. Whole Foods grocery deliveries usually cost around $10 in fees per order.

The new service can help Prime members save money if they order groceries more frequently and if their orders would usually cause them to pay added fees.

Amazon pitched the subscription as something that “pays for itself after just one delivery order per month from Whole Foods Market, or one delivery order per month from Amazon Fresh for under $50.” Using either option would cost around $10 an order.

Members can also get 30-minute pickup times on orders, no matter how big or small, and have priority access to recurring grocery orders.

Related: FTC Sues to Block $25 Billion Grocery Merger Between Kroger, Albertsons

Non-Prime members with an EBT (electronic benefit transfer) card can access the same subscription for $5 per month, without paying extra for a Prime membership.

Amazon is currently offering a free 30-day grocery delivery service trial to Prime members and EBT card holders.

Photo by Peter Dazeley/Getty Images

Earlier this month, reports emerged that Amazon’s cashier-free “Just Walk Out” technology at its Fresh stores in the U.S. stores required human review that was conducted abroad. Amazon decided to replace Just Walk Out with Dash Carts that track what shoppers put into their carts and give them a running total as they move throughout the store.

Related: Amazon Is Trading Its ‘Just Walk Out’ AI Technology For ‘Smart’ Carts — And AI Reportedly Needed Humans to Do the Job Right

Amazon started testing out the grocery delivery subscription last year in select areas in Colorado, California, and Ohio. As of Tuesday, the service is available in 3,500 cities and towns throughout the U.S.

Key Takeaways

  • Amazon announced a grocery store delivery subscription on Tuesday.
  • It offers benefits including unlimited free deliveries on orders above $35 and one-hour deliveries where applicable.
  • Amazon is currently offering a free 30-day trial of the service across 3,500 U.S. cities and towns.

If you’re a fan of Whole Foods Market and Amazon Fresh delivery, Amazon’s new grocery subscription might make things a little cheaper.

U.S.-based Amazon Prime members, who already pay $15 a month for a Prime membership, can now access an added $10 grocery subscription that makes deliveries on orders from Amazon Fresh, Whole Foods, and local grocery stores free for orders above $35.

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Sherin Shibu

News Reporter at Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur Staff
Sherin Shibu is a business news reporter at Entrepreneur.com. She previously worked for PCMag, Business Insider, The Messenger, and ZDNET as a reporter and copyeditor. Her areas of coverage encompass tech, business, strategy, finance, and even space. She is a Columbia University graduate.

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