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AIAlexaAmazonLifestyleTech

Alexa+ can now place your Grubhub and Uber Eats orders for you

Alexa+ now lets you chat your way to a Grubhub or Uber Eats order, from craving to checkout, without ever touching your phone.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
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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Apr 1, 2026, 11:33 AM EDT
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Amazon Alexa device display screen showing an active food order from Auro's Gourmet restaurant. The screen displays 'Taking your order...' with a current order total of 2 items for $22.98. Two menu items are visible: Coconut Curry (Chicken, Medium spice) priced at $15.99 with a quantity of 1, and Spring Rolls (Tofu) priced at $6.99 with a quantity of 1. Each item has edit and delete options. A blue 'Check out' button is located in the top right. The bottom of the screen shows menu category filters including Featured Items, Appetizers, Salads, Entrees, Noodles, Curry, Dessert, and Drinks. The Alexa device is positioned on a wooden table against a neutral background.
Image: Amazon
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Amazon just gave Alexa+ a very real-world job: handling your food delivery cravings through Grubhub and Uber Eats, almost like you’re talking to a human server instead of a smart speaker. The idea is simple but powerful—tell Alexa what you’re in the mood for, tweak your order as much as you like, and watch everything update on an Echo Show screen in real time, without bouncing between apps.

At its core, this new feature is Amazon’s latest attempt to make Alexa+ feel less like a command line and more like a conversation. For years, voice assistants have mostly been “you ask, it answers,” which works fine for things like checking the weather, but quickly falls apart when you’re trying to build a messy, multi-item food order. With Alexa+, Amazon is leaning on its generative AI engine so you can talk through an order the way you would with a waiter: change your mind, ask what’s popular, add a dessert at the last second, or edit toppings mid-sentence. Alexa only chimes in when you need help or clarification, and the rest of the time, the on-screen interface quietly keeps your cart, prices, and customizations in sync.

Getting started isn’t complicated, but there are a couple of requirements that show where Amazon is heading with Alexa+. First, you need Alexa+ itself, which Amazon now pitches as a next‑gen AI assistant and a Prime benefit in the U.S., accessible by voice, browser, and the Alexa app. You also need an Echo Show 8 or larger device, because the whole experience is designed around a mix of voice and visuals—Alexa talks you through decisions while the screen shows menus, add‑ons, and your running total. Once that’s in place, you link your Grubhub or Uber Eats account from the Alexa app by heading to More > Alexa+ Store > Food & Reservations; your past orders and favorites sync over automatically so you’re not starting from scratch every time.

From there, the experience is meant to feel as casual as a late‑night “I’m starving” conversation. You can open with something broad, like “I want to order Italian for delivery,” and Alexa+ will pull up restaurant options from Grubhub and Uber Eats that match, letting you narrow things down with follow‑ups like “Let’s order from that pizza place” or “Show me something kid‑friendly.” If you already know where you’re ordering from, you can jump straight to it by name and skip the discovery step entirely. For Amazon, the discovery-to-order funnel is a big deal: partners like Grubhub call out that it gives restaurants another path to visibility while making it easier for users to stumble onto something new without digging through app filters and endless category lists.

Where it gets interesting is how you actually build the order. Instead of tapping tiny buttons, you talk through each item: “Add a double cheeseburger with extra ketchup, no onion,” or “Make that two, and add fries to the first one.” If you say something vague like “add a meat lovers pizza,” Alexa+ will try to map that to the closest item on the restaurant’s menu, then show it on the screen so you can confirm or adjust it. You can ask to see desserts, check what’s popular, or ask for suggestions that work for kids or picky eaters without switching contexts; the cart stays visible and updates in real time as you talk. Before you pay, Alexa+ shows a full breakdown—item names, quantities, individual prices, and the total cost—so you can sanity‑check everything before committing.

After that, Alexa doesn’t just disappear. Once the order is placed, you get status updates in the “For You” section on your device, and you can always ask, “Alexa, where’s my food?” to check on progress. That builds on earlier work Uber Eats did with Alexa for voice-based order tracking, but this time the assistant is involved from discovery all the way to delivery, not just the last mile. For people who already talk to Alexa to control their smart home or check on packages, adding food delivery tracking is a pretty natural extension—one more reason to keep the device on your counter and in your routine.

Amazon is clearly framing this as more than a convenience feature; it’s a test bed for a new interaction model. Ordering food is a good stress test because it’s messy: you go back and forth, you remember add‑ons halfway through, and you rarely know exactly what you want when you start. Amazon says this is “the first step” toward Alexa+ automatically shifting how it behaves depending on what you’re trying to do—quick and transactional for something like checking a forecast, more free‑form and conversational for tasks like building a food order, planning a trip, or managing a complex project. The long‑term vision here is an AI assistant that picks the right style on the fly instead of forcing every interaction into the same rigid pattern.

For Grubhub and Uber Eats, the upside is obvious: one more powerful front door to their platforms. Grubhub’s product team points out that this creates a smoother funnel from “I’m craving something” to a completed order, with Alexa acting as a kind of conversational concierge. Uber Eats, for its part, frames the partnership as a way to meet customers “wherever they are” and experiment with new ways of ordering that don’t depend on people staring at their phones. And because Alexa+ talks directly to those services instead of replacing them, users keep their existing accounts, loyalty perks, and saved addresses, just with a smarter layer on top.

If you’re a Prime member, there’s also a quiet but important perk baked into the story: Grubhub+ is still bundled for free with Prime, bringing $0 delivery fees on eligible orders, lower service fees, 5% back on pickup, and occasional exclusive deals. In practice, that means the more Amazon convinces you to use Alexa+ as your default ordering hub, the more likely you are to lean on Prime and Grubhub+ benefits without thinking too hard about alternatives. It’s classic Amazon strategy—smooth out friction with clever tech, then make sure the economic incentives nudge you deeper into the ecosystem.

The timing also says a lot about where Amazon wants to take Alexa+. The company has spent years trying to prove that Alexa is more than a novelty for timers and trivia, and generative AI has given it a shot at redefining the assistant around richer, more context‑aware conversations. Food delivery is just one of the early examples; Amazon is already teasing similar “adaptive” experiences for things like grocery shopping and travel planning, where the back‑and‑forth nature of the task is a better match for a conversational AI than a static app screen. If Alexa+ can reliably handle a chaotic group order on a Friday night without making you repeat yourself 10 times, it sets a strong precedent for what it might do in more complex scenarios later.

Of course, there are trade‑offs. Right now, the feature is limited to Alexa+ customers on Echo Show 8 and larger displays, so if you’re using an audio‑only Echo, you’re on the sidelines for now. Amazon hasn’t committed to a clear timeline for expanding beyond those devices, which suggests the company wants to keep a tight grip on the user experience while it fine‑tunes the AI models and the interface. And while the idea of “just talking to order” is appealing, it will have to prove it’s consistently faster and less frustrating than a well‑designed app—especially for power users who know exactly what they want and how to tap through it.

Still, if you already have an Echo Show in the kitchen and rely on food delivery more than you’d like to admit, this is the kind of upgrade that quietly becomes part of your routine. You link your accounts once, lean on your past orders when you’re too tired to think, and occasionally let Alexa suggest something new when you just say “I’m in the mood for Indian.” And as Alexa+ continues to evolve—with customizable “personality styles” ranging from more concise to more laid‑back—the idea of having a chill assistant walk you through a late‑night pizza run without touching your phone starts to feel less like a demo and more like how this tech was meant to work.


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