Retailers Abandon Self-Checkout Systems Due to Rising Theft and Customer Dissatisfaction
In 2020, Walmart initiated trials of cashierless, fully self-checkout large-scale stores, initially in the United States before expanding to Canada.
However, the trial didn’t gain widespread acceptance. Walmart disclosed to CBC News that currently, only one large-scale store across both Canada and the U.S. operates with an entirely self-checkout, cashier-free model—in Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, Quebec.
Concurrently, over the past eight months, the retail behemoth has phased out all self-checkout terminals at six U.S. locations, aligning with other major big-box chains that have opted to remove the machines from select stores, including a recent case at a Giant Tiger outlet in Stratford, Ontario.
This marks a notable departure from the anticipated trend—as opposed to the prevalence of all-self-checkout stores, certain retail establishments are reverting to the traditional all-cashier setup.
“Stores anticipated that this technology would allow them to significantly reduce labour costs,” said Christopher Andrews, a sociologist and author of The Overworked Consumer: Self-Checkouts, Supermarkets, and the Do-It-Yourself Economy.
“I think they’re just losing so much [money] that it just becomes an economic liability.”
Numerous studies have indicated the prevalence of self-checkout theft, yet concrete data is scarce as retailers typically keep such information confidential.
The Retail Council of Canada has indicated through discussions with its members that incidents of self-checkout theft are increasing.