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Wing’s drones are about to show up at 150 more Walmart stores

The last mile of retail may soon happen above your backyard.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 11, 2026, 10:00 AM EST
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Wing drone delivery
Image: Wing Aviation
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By the time you look up and hear that familiar mosquito whine over a Walmart parking lot, drone delivery might finally feel less like a sci-fi demo and more like another boring piece of American retail infrastructure. Alphabet-owned Wing is betting on exactly that, rolling its on-demand drone service out to 150 more Walmart stores and sketching a near-term future where tens of millions of people can get cereal, Tylenol, and maybe a latte dropped into their yard from the sky.​

The scope of the expansion is what makes this moment feel different from the past decade of cautious drone pilots. Wing and Walmart say that, by 2027, they want drones operating out of more than 270 Walmart locations, reaching over 40 million customers in markets that stretch from Los Angeles to Miami and include cities like St. Louis, Cincinnati, and Miami alongside existing hubs in Dallas–Fort Worth and Atlanta. That’s a big leap from the roughly two dozen stores Wing is active in today, and it turns an experiment in a few Texas suburbs into something approaching a national network.​

If you zoom out, the pace of this rollout is the culmination of a slow burn. Wing has been tinkering with drone delivery for more than a decade, logging around 750,000 deliveries globally since its first launch in 2012 and gradually moving from pilot projects with Walgreens and health-care partners to commercial runs with Walmart and DoorDash. Walmart, meanwhile, has cycled through multiple drone partners: after trying DroneUp in several states and ultimately unwinding that relationship, the retailer has leaned into Wing (and Zipline) as it figures out which mix of aircraft, regulations, and operations can actually scale.​

On the ground—or above it—this is meant to feel pretty mundane for shoppers. You open the Wing app, fill a cart with eligible items, confirm whether your front or backyard is the drop zone, and wait. At a participating Walmart, staff pack the order into a small box or bag, attach it to a hook, and a Wing drone cruises off, flying at up to about 65 miles per hour with a payload that currently tops out around 5 pounds on newer models. When it gets to your place, the drone hovers and lowers the package down on a tether, trying very hard not to crack the eggs or spill the coffee, then zips back to its nest for the next run.​

That last part—the repeatability—is what Wing is leaning on to argue that this isn’t just a flashy add-on to Walmart’s curbside pickup. The company says demand is already forming real habits: the most active quarter of its customers orders roughly three times a week, and overall deliveries have tripled in just the last six months. For Walmart, that behavior is gold, because it turns the retailer’s sprawling parking lots into mini logistics hubs where drones can chip away at the most expensive part of e-commerce: the last mile between store and doorstep.​

The pitch, environmentally, is pretty straightforward. Small electric aircraft, flying short routes with light cargo, should be able to replace at least some short van trips or third-party gig deliveries, especially in suburban neighborhoods where distances are too long to walk but too short to route efficiently in bulk. Regulators are starting to make room for that vision: the FAA has proposed a new framework for beyond-visual-line-of-sight flights that would let certified operators run larger fleets over typical housing developments, with approvals for drones under about 55 pounds to operate regularly in suburban areas rather than just under narrow waivers.​

Of course, that all assumes the neighbors are on board with a fleet of buzzing aircraft overhead. Noise, safety, and privacy concerns have trailed every drone project to date, and Wing is trying to prove that the tech has matured enough that it can thread those needles. The company emphasizes that its hardware and routing are tuned to minimize noise and dwell time over homes, and Walmart’s parking-lot “nests” are designed to keep the mess contained to commercial zones instead of dropping launch pads into residential streets.​

There’s also the question of what, exactly, needs a drone. The 5-pound payload cap covers a surprising amount of everyday shopping—think snacks, a forgotten ingredient, cold medicine, a phone cable, maybe a couple of small household items—but it’s never going to replace a weekly grocery run. Instead, Wing and Walmart are nudging people toward treating drone delivery more like a hyper-local convenience layer, the way some people already treat quick commerce apps in big cities: a way to patch gaps in your pantry or grab something time-sensitive without committing to a full order or a car trip.​

From a business perspective, this is also a way for both companies to hedge against the ceiling of traditional e-commerce. Walmart has been steadily building out pickup and delivery for years, but every incremental order carries labor and transport costs that are hard to squeeze. If drones can handle a meaningful slice of small-basket orders more cheaply and quickly, they become not just a consumer perk but a margin play—especially in the suburbs where Wing and Walmart are targeting much of this rollout.​

The timing is interesting, too. The broader drone industry has had a rough ride, with plenty of overpromises in the mid-2010s and a long stretch of regulatory, technical, and economic friction that made the concept feel permanently stuck in pilot mode. A 150-store expansion with a clearly stated target of 270 locations by 2027—including some of the country’s biggest metro areas—signals that Wing and Walmart think the mix of tech, rules, and demand has finally tipped in their favor, even as federal agencies continue to scrutinize drone tech more closely.​

For shoppers on the ground, the shift might be more subtle than the splashy numbers suggest. You’ll still be scrolling the Walmart app or a dedicated Wing app, still tapping “checkout,” still waiting a handful of minutes for stuff to show up—just with more of those orders arriving from above instead of the side of a minivan. But for the logistics industry, and for Alphabet’s long-running drone bet, a sky full of Walmart-branded deliveries is an unmistakable signal: drone delivery is moving from novelty to infrastructure, one parking-lot launch pad at a time.​


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