Amazon Triggers '30-Minute Delivery Era' with Nationwide Expansion of Ultra-Fast Logistics
Graciela Maria Reporter
| 2026-05-13 07:30:49
SEATTLE — Amazon, the global e-commerce titan, has officially declared a new frontier in the "delivery wars" by launching its 30-minute ultra-fast delivery service across dozens of major U.S. cities. The move marks a strategic shift from localized pilot programs to a massive nationwide rollout, aiming to redefine consumer expectations for the "last mile."
On May 12 (local time), the company announced the expansion of ‘Amazon Now,’ a service designed to bridge the gap between digital ordering and physical possession in under half an hour. By targeting millions of customers simultaneously, Amazon is positioning itself not just as an online marketplace, but as a real-time utility for daily life.
From Groceries to Gadgets: The "Immediate Need" Strategy
The service is meticulously curated to cater to high-urgency consumer needs. According to Udit Madan, Amazon’s Vice President of Worldwide Operations, the inventory available for 30-minute delivery includes thousands of essential products.
“We have prepared a lineup that meets the immediate demands of our customers’ lives,” Madan stated. “Whether it is fresh ingredients for tonight’s dinner, household staples like detergent and toothpaste, or a pair of AirPods needed urgently before a flight, we can now put those products in the customer's hand almost instantly.”
To provide flexibility, Amazon has segmented its delivery tiers:
Ultra-Fast: 30-minute delivery for high-priority essentials.
Rapid: 1 to 3-hour delivery for a selection of approximately 90,000 products.
Same-Day: Daily delivery for millions of items across the broader catalog.
For the premium 30-minute speed, Amazon Prime members will be charged a fee of $3.99, while non-Prime users will pay $13.99. To maintain operational efficiency, the company will also apply additional surcharges for small-basket orders totaling less than $15.
The Secret Sauce: Urban Micro-Fulfillment
Industry analysts point to Amazon’s aggressive infrastructure overhaul as the primary driver of this "dream speed." Over the past two years, the company has pivoted away from massive, distant warehouses toward a network of small-scale fulfillment centers located in the heart of urban and residential neighborhoods. This "hyper-localization" allows delivery drivers to bypass long-haul transit and navigate directly to the consumer’s doorstep within minutes.
The data suggests this strategy is already yielding massive dividends. Last year, Amazon delivered over 13 billion items globally with same-day or next-day speed. In the U.S. alone, the company handled 8 billion one-day deliveries—a staggering 30% increase compared to 2024 figures. Notably, more than half of these rapid deliveries consisted of daily necessities and groceries, indicating a permanent shift in how Americans shop for their pantries.
Reshaping the Retail Landscape
Amazon’s latest gambit is seen as a direct challenge to brick-and-mortar retailers and quick-commerce startups. By integrating high-tech logistics with a vast inventory, Amazon is attempting to eliminate the last remaining advantage of physical stores: instant gratification.
The company has set an ambitious goal to expand the service to tens of millions of users by the end of 2026. As the "30-minute era" begins, the retail industry is watching closely to see if Amazon’s logistical dominance will force a total transformation of the American consumption pattern, making the "wait" for an online order a relic of the past.
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