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

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Amazon plans to deliver orders faster than you can fix a sandwich

Amazon Now offers near-instant delivery, starting with these two U.S. cities

Add as a preferred source on Google
Amazon delivery
Unsplash

Amazon just cranked up the speed on online shopping with the launch of Amazon Now, a new service designed to drop off essentials in about 30 minutes. It quietly flipped the switch in parts of Seattle and Philadelphia, marking its boldest move yet into the instant-delivery game.

We’re talking thousands of items – milk, eggs, chargers, cold medicine – delivered almost instantly. Prime members get a break with fees starting at $3.99, but if you aren’t a member, you’re looking at a steep $13.99 delivery charge. Plus, there is a small fee of $1.99 if your order is under $15.

Recommended Videos

To pull this off, Amazon didn’t just speed up its vans; it built entirely new, smaller warehouses right near neighborhoods. It’s a whole new layer of speed on top of its usual massive network.

Why this matters – and what it means for customers

This is Amazon taking a direct shot at Instacart, Gopuff, and DoorDash. Those companies have struggled to make super-fast delivery profitable nationwide, but Amazon has the infrastructure to potentially make it work.

It’s also a strategic play to make your Prime subscription feel indispensable again. By shrinking delivery times to 30 minutes, Amazon isn’t just competing; it’s trying to reset consumer expectations entirely. If it can deliver a charger before your phone dies, that’s a powerful hook.

Why You Should Care

For you, this means the “oh no, I forgot the [insert item]” panic is over. Whether it is diapers, toothpaste, or a missing dinner ingredient, you can get it faster than a pizza order.

But there is a catch: coverage is limited right now, and the costs add up fast if you aren’t on Prime. It is also shaking up the industry behind the scenes, with Amazon reportedly asking brands to figure out which products fit best in this new, hyper-fast pipeline.

What’s Next

Amazon hasn’t dropped a full roadmap yet, but the hiring patterns suggest more cities are coming. It’s currently testing the waters to see if we actually want stuff this fast. If we do, Amazon Now could become the new standard for Prime, forcing every other delivery app to scramble just to keep up.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Trump says Intel will make chips for Apple in a major win for U.S. manufacturing
Intel Foundry may have landed its most important customer yet
Logo

Intel’s efforts to rebuild its chipmaking business may have landed its biggest customer yet. U.S. President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that Apple has agreed to work with Intel to design and manufacture chips in the United States, a deal that could significantly strengthen Intel’s foundry ambitions.

The announcement does not come out of the blue. Earlier reports indicated that Apple and Intel had been discussing a manufacturing partnership for more than a year and had already begun working together on select chip production projects.

Read more
AI Is Coming for Jobs. The Question Is Whether Governments Are Paying Attention. 
A conversation with entrepreneur Marco Riedesser on AI, automation and the future of work.
Adult, Male, Man

Subscribe to Trending Forward: YouTube | Spotify | Apple Podcast

When Marco Riedesser reached out and suggested that we have a serious conversation about AI and jobs, my first reaction was probably the same as yours: haven't we already been having that conversation?

Read more
Intel’s turnaround is one for the ages, without having much to show for it
Wall Street is betting big on Intel before the results arrive
Logo

Intel’s comeback has become one of the market’s biggest surprises. Its stock has risen nearly 490% over the past year, pushing the company back into record territory and reviving confidence in a chipmaker many had written off.

The problem is that Intel still has little product success to justify that excitement.

Read more