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Why These 3 Major Retailers Are Removing Self-Checkout by the End of the Month

Ian Hernandez

Ian Hernandez

May 2, 2026 · 3 min read

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Why These 3 Major Retailers Are Removing Self-Checkout by the End of the Month
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In this article
  1. 01Walmart's Targeted Removals
  2. 02Target Limits Checkout Options
  3. 03Costco's Tech Pivot
  4. 04Theft Drives the Change
  5. 05Customer Gripes Mount
  6. 06State Laws Tighten Rules
  7. 07Philadelphia's Quick Shift
  8. 08Broader Retail Rollback
  9. 09Expert Views on Shrink
  10. 10Future Checkout Mix
  11. 11What This Means for Shoppers

Self-checkout kiosks promised faster lines and fewer waits. Yet after years of glitches and frustrations, major chains like Walmart, Target, and Costco now pull back. Recent moves signal a shift back to human cashiers in select spots.[1]

The trend accelerates amid theft worries and new rules. Stores tweak setups store by store. Customers notice shorter self-checkout rows already.[2]

Walmart’s Targeted Removals

Walmart's Targeted Removals (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Walmart’s Targeted Removals (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Walmart strips self-checkout from high-theft locations. A South Philadelphia store ditched them recently for more cashier lanes. Officials cite better service and local needs.[1]

Over a dozen stores lost kiosks in the past year. Theft drops sharply after changes. The chain tests what works best per community.[2][3]

Target Limits Checkout Options

Target Limits Checkout Options (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Target Limits Checkout Options (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Target curbs self-checkout use with item caps. Shoppers with over ten items head to manned lanes. This eases lines but irks some with full carts.[4]

Stores adjust based on traffic and issues. Broader pullbacks follow theft trends. Human oversight returns to key spots.[1]

Costco’s Tech Pivot

Costco's Tech Pivot (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Costco’s Tech Pivot (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Costco rolls out scan-and-go over full self-checkout. Staff scan carts upfront, members pay quick at registers. Self-kiosks stay but play second fiddle.[1]

This hybrid cuts errors and speeds members through. No full kiosk wipeout planned yet. Focus shifts to reliable flow.[5]

Theft Drives the Change

Theft Drives the Change (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Theft Drives the Change (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Shrink rates soar at unmanned stations. Nearly seven in ten users think kiosks aid stealing. Organized groups exploit weak spots.[1]

One in four admits skipping scans on purpose. Stores lose big yearly. Cashiers spot trouble fast.[2]

Customer Gripes Mount

Customer Gripes Mount (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Customer Gripes Mount (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Glitches frustrate everyone from produce scans to payment hangs. Long waits pile up without help nearby. Many prefer a quick human scan.[1]

Feedback shapes store tweaks. Shorter lines emerge post-change. Service feels personal again.[3]

State Laws Tighten Rules

State Laws Tighten Rules (Image Credits: Unsplash)
State Laws Tighten Rules (Image Credits: Unsplash)

California cities like Long Beach mandate staffed lanes alongside kiosks. Ohio and others eye 15-item limits. Retailers adapt early.[6]

Bills demand one worker per few machines. Alcohol bans at self-checkout loom. Compliance pushes hardware cuts.[1]

Philadelphia’s Quick Shift

Philadelphia's Quick Shift (Random Retail, Flickr, CC BY 2.0)
Philadelphia’s Quick Shift (Random Retail, Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

All Walmart spots there cut kiosks for cashiers. March changes hit south side stores first. Service boosts follow.[3]

Five locations now prioritize manned checkouts. Theft and patterns guide picks. Customers welcome the ease.[1]

Broader Retail Rollback

Broader Retail Rollback (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Broader Retail Rollback (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Dollar General yanked kiosks from 12,000 stores back in 2024. Five Below phases most out too. Trend spreads wide.[1]

Sam’s Club swaps for app scans. Majors watch and mirror. Human touch regains ground.[1]

Expert Views on Shrink

Expert Views on Shrink (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Expert Views on Shrink (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Analysts link removals to theft reviews. High-shrink stores go manned first. Savings offset labor costs.[1]

Police calls drop post-kiosk. AI aids but can’t replace eyes. Balance tips toward staff.[2]

Future Checkout Mix

Future Checkout Mix (Image Credits: Pexels)
Future Checkout Mix (Image Credits: Pexels)

Hybrids blend tech and people. Full self-checkout fades in risky zones. Speed meets security.[5]

Stores test per market. Regulations shape the path. Shoppers get reliable lanes back.[6]

What This Means for Shoppers

What This Means for Shoppers (Image Credits: Unsplash)
What This Means for Shoppers (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Expect manned lanes at busier times. Item limits stay in some spots. Theft curbs help prices hold.[1]

Service warms up interactions. Lines move with practice. The old way proves its worth still.

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Ian Hernandez

Ian Hernandez

Ian Hernandez is a data scientist whose passion for uncovering insights and crafting narratives has made him a sought-after voice on social, economic, and policy issues across the United States. With a strong foundation in data analytics and a knack for storytelling, Ian blends technical expertise with a deep understanding of societal dynamics.

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