Amazon is cranking up the speed dial on online shopping again, this time promising to drop fresh groceries and everyday essentials at your door in 30 minutes or less in parts of the United States. The new ultra-fast service, called Amazon Now, is aimed squarely at the “I-need-it-right-now” moments that traditional same-day delivery still can’t quite satisfy.
If you live in one of the initial launch markets, this will start to feel less like “ordering online” and more like having a store attached to your block. Amazon Now is already widely available in Atlanta, Dallas–Fort Worth, Philadelphia, and Seattle, with rollout underway to dozens more cities, including Austin, Houston, Minneapolis, Orlando, Phoenix, Denver, and Oklahoma City. Amazon says the goal is to reach “tens of millions” of U.S. customers by the end of the year, making 30-minute delivery feel less like a pilot and more like a default expectation in major metros.
At its core, Amazon Now is pretty simple: you open the Amazon app or website, look for the “30-Minute Delivery” option in the banner or search results, and shop from a curated catalog of a few thousand items designed for urgent needs. The selection leans heavily into fresh groceries and fast-moving essentials — think dairy and eggs, fresh produce, bakery items, snacks, baby products, pet food, personal care, over-the-counter meds, electronics accessories, and, in some areas, alcohol. In other words, the stuff you notice you’re out of at the worst possible time: diapers at 10 p.m., coffee just before a 9 a.m. call, a phone charger as you’re packing for the airport.
Speed like this doesn’t come free, but Amazon is trying to keep the economics predictable. Prime members pay a flat $3.99 per 30-minute order, while non-Prime customers are charged $13.99, with an extra “small order” fee applied to baskets under $15. Prime itself continues at $14.99 a month or $139 per year in the U.S., with discounted tiers like Prime for Young Adults and Prime Access available at roughly half price for students and qualifying government-assistance recipients. For frequent Amazon users, that means Amazon Now becomes another add-on perk in a growing bundle that already includes fast shipping, Prime Video, music, and more.
Behind the scenes, the logistics are where this really gets interesting. Instead of pulling these ultra-fast orders from massive fulfillment centers on the outskirts of cities, Amazon is using a network of smaller, micro-fulfillment locations tucked closer to where people actually live and work. These sites are more “convenience-store-sized” than warehouse-sized, typically stocking around 3,500 of the most in-demand products so pickers can grab items in minutes and drivers don’t have to travel far. It’s the same basic model quick-commerce startups have used for years, but scaled with Amazon’s data, routing algorithms, and existing last-mile network, including on-demand Flex drivers.
Operationally, Amazon Now plugs into a broader ecosystem of fast-delivery options that Amazon has been quietly tightening for years. On top of 30-minute delivery, the company is already offering one-hour and three-hour delivery on a wider assortment, Prime Air drone delivery in under 60 minutes in select suburbs, and same-day delivery for millions of items in more than 10,000 U.S. cities and towns. In 2025 alone, Amazon delivered more than 13 billion items globally the same or next day, including over 8 billion such deliveries in the U.S., with groceries and everyday essentials making up roughly half of those shipments. Amazon Now doesn’t replace those services; it sits on top of them as the new fastest tier.
If you zoom out a bit, this move is about more than just bragging rights on speed. The U.S. quick-commerce market — the world of 10-to-30-minute delivery — has become one of the most competitive battlegrounds in retail, led by names like Gopuff, DoorDash, Instacart, and Kroger’s own rapid services. Analysts tracking the sector say that delivery promises in the 11–30 minute band are expected to keep expanding over the next few years, driven largely by micro-fulfillment build-outs and growing consumer comfort with paying a bit extra for urgency. Amazon, which already sits on the short list of quick-commerce leaders thanks to Amazon Fresh and same-day options, is now pushing directly into the niche that startups tried to own.
For those rivals, Amazon Now is not great news. Instacart, Gopuff, and other ultrafast players have spent years trying to convince consumers that 10–30 minute grocery delivery is a must-have, often subsidizing orders heavily to build habit. Now they’re facing a competitor that not only has deeper pockets, but also doesn’t need each delivery to be profitable on its own because it’s tied into a wider Prime relationship and a massive cross-category catalog. When your Amazon cart already includes electronics, home goods, and streaming subscriptions, it’s easy to get hooked on the idea that the same app can rescue your dinner plans in half an hour.
For shoppers, the appeal is obvious, but so are the trade-offs. On the plus side, Amazon Now reduces the number of times you need to make a last-minute store run, which can be a lifesaver for parents, busy professionals, or anyone with mobility or time constraints. Because it runs 24/7 in most serviceable areas, you no longer have to worry about store hours or whether the local supermarket is slammed right after work. And since the catalog is curated around urgency, it’s often faster to find what you need in the Now interface than to wade through the full Amazon inventory.
On the flip side, ultra-fast delivery comes with familiar concerns. There are environmental questions about sending out more frequent, smaller trips, though Amazon argues that its dense network of nearby sites actually shortens driving distances and helps consolidate routes. Labor advocates will likely watch closely how this affects warehouse and delivery workers, especially as Amazon leans on high-speed picking and flexible gig-style driver programs to hit those 30-minute targets. And for local grocers and corner shops, this is yet another digital competitor entering the “forgot-the-milk” territory they’ve traditionally owned.
There’s also a cultural shift happening in the background. Over the past decade, delivery expectations have steadily escalated from “sometime next week” to “tomorrow” to “later today.” Same-day and even one-hour windows are no longer remarkable in major U.S. cities. Amazon Now nudges that bar further, normalizing the idea that 30 minutes is a reasonable wait time for anything from blueberries to AirPods, as long as you’re willing to pay a small premium. If history is any guide, once customers get used to that level of convenience, it’s hard to go back.
Internationally, Amazon has already been testing this future. Amazon Now first launched in India in 2025 and has since expanded into urban areas of Brazil, Mexico, Japan, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom with similar ultra-fast promises. Those markets have served as proving grounds for the micro-warehouse model and for experimenting with even shorter delivery times — down to 15 minutes in some regions. The U.S. rollout looks less like a risky experiment and more like a scaled-up version of a playbook Amazon has been refining for several years.
If you’re wondering what this looks like in everyday life, picture a few scenarios. You’re halfway through cooking and realize you’re out of eggs and onions; you tap in an order and get them before the oven finishes preheating. You remember your kid has a project due tomorrow and you’re missing glue and markers; it shows up before bedtime. Your flight is in an hour and you can’t find your earbuds; a courier drops a fresh pair while you’re still zipping your suitcase. These are the use cases Amazon is optimizing for: small, urgent, high-value moments that build habit and loyalty.
For Amazon, the bet is clear: if the company can make “30 minutes or less” feel as routine as two-day shipping once did, it tightens its grip on how Americans shop for the most mundane parts of daily life. Groceries stop being a separate mental category with dedicated apps and become just another tab in the Amazon universe. For everyone else in the quick-commerce race, the clock just started ticking a lot faster.
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