Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

Amazon Go, the checkout-free convenience store, opens in Chicago

Add as a preferred source on Google

Amazon’s revolutionary “grab-and-go” grocery store is now open in Chicago, marking its first expansion of the cashier-less stores outside of the company’s home city of Seattle, the Chicago Tribune reports.

Rumors that Amazon may introduce its stores to new markets started swirling after job ads indicating the company was looking for people to manage the new Amazon Go stores in Chicago and San Francisco were discovered by The Seattle Times. Amazon later confirmed to the Times that it was indeed planning to open Go stores in Chicago and San Francisco, but declined to offer any dates. Now, the Chicago store is open for business.

Recommended Videos

Amazon didn’t do a great job keeping its plans under wraps. The company had a building permit for the construction of an “Amazon store” in Chicago’s Loop district, according to real-estate tracker Curbed. It was also discovered that Amazon has been planning to open up a store near San Francisco’s Union Square, as reported by the San Francisco Chronicle.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Amazon Go technology tracks shoppers as they make their way around the store. All they need to do is scan their Go app once when they enter, and, well, that’s it. The store uses sensors, cameras, and artificial intelligence technology to track what you’re putting into your bag as you move about the store. It’s even smart enough to notice when you take an item out of your bag and put it back on the shelf, should you change your mind while you’re making your way around.

The company spent the whole of 2017 testing the technology with employees, using the trial to refine the system before the official opening at the start of this year. It has since opened several other locations around Seattle.

For visitors to the store, it’s a one-of-a-kind shopping experience, with some even wondering if they might be arrested for shoplifting when leaving, without any apparent payment transaction having taken place. But it has. Check your Go app and you’ll see how Amazon has logged everything in your bag and automatically charged your account.

Interested to know what it’s like to shop at an Amazon Go store? Digital Trends’ Jenny McGrath was one of the first people to shop at the Seattle store, so take a moment to find out how it went for her.

Updated on September 17: Amazon Go opens in Chicago. 

AJ Dellinger
AJ Dellinger is a freelance reporter from Madison, Wisconsin with an affinity for all things tech. He has been published by…
SwitchBot’s new outdoor security camera uses AI to describe activity around your home
This 3K outdoor camera can explain what happened and search footage by prompt
Person, Security, Appliance

SwitchBot has launched the Outdoor Pan/Tilt Cam 3K in North America and the UK, adding a new outdoor security camera for monitoring yards, driveways, entrances, garages, and small shops.

The camera is designed to cover a wider area than a fixed security camera. It can rotate horizontally and vertically, follow moving subjects, record in 3K resolution, and use AI to summarize what happened in a clip, such as a delivery arriving, an animal entering the yard, or someone approaching the house.

Read more
EcoFlow DELTA 3 Ultra Plus Review: Portability meets serious firepower
EcoFlow Delta 3 Ultra power station

See at Amazon

Quick Review

Read more
Amazon’s new Fire Sticks are turning sideloading into a thing of the past
Vega OS blocks regular Fire Stick sideloading, which means buyers lose a major reason tinkerers liked the device.
Lamp, Person, Adult

Amazon's new Fire Sticks are starting to close off one of the device's biggest unofficial perks, installing apps from outside Amazon's Appstore.

The change comes with Vega OS, Amazon's newer Linux-based Fire TV software. Amazon introduced the Fire TV Stick 4K Select as the first Fire TV Stick to run Vega OS, and its developer site says future Fire TV Sticks will use the platform. Older Fire Sticks ran Fire OS, an Android-based system that gave users more room for outside apps and tinkering.

Read more