Same-Day Perishable Deliveries

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Amazon Adds Its Same-Day Perishable Delivery to Amazon Business

Amazon Business introduced same-day perishable grocery delivery, allowing organisations to order fresh food alongside office supplies through a single checkout experience, using the same delivery footprint as Amazon’s consumer perishable grocery service. The rollout follows the company’s consumer launch in August 2025, which expanded to more than 2,300 cities and towns by the end of last year.

Businesses can select delivery windows and set arrival preferences so groceries reach workplaces during operating hours, with orders available without bulk purchase requirements or subscription commitments. Business Prime members receive free same-day delivery on orders over $25 in most areas, while smaller orders and non-members incur delivery fees.

For businesses, the service streamlines workplace provisioning by combining perishables and standard procurement into a single order flow, reducing operational friction and saving time for office managers. The launch also reinforces the broader shift toward e-commerce-led grocery fulfilment and integrated B2B convenience services.

Trend Themes

  1. Integrated B2B E-grocery — A unified checkout for perishables and office supplies creates potential for platforms that merge procurement workflows and inventory visibility across business categories.
  2. Flexible Same-day Last-mile — On-demand delivery windows and perishable handling at business addresses point to scalable last-mile networks optimized for time-sensitive, low-volume commercial orders.
  3. Subscription-free Commercial Fulfilment — Pay-per-order same-day options without bulk or subscription requirements highlight market demand for transactional B2B fulfilment models that serve small and mid-sized buyers.

Industry Implications

  1. Corporate Foodservice — Office catering and workplace meal programs may be reshaped by instant access to fresh groceries integrated into standard procurement channels.
  2. Cold Chain Logistics — Temperature-controlled transport and micro-fulfilment centers close to business districts could become focal points for delivering perishable goods reliably at scale.
  3. Procurement Technology — eProcurement platforms and marketplace software are positioned to offer unified ordering, billing, and compliance features that encompass both perishables and nonperishables.

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