A person passes through new shopping cart scanning tech at Sam's Club.
Sam's Club's new gateways are equipped with an array of cameras and sensors that capture images of the shopper's cart and processes them with computer vision.
  • Sam's Club is ditching physical receipt checks in favor of an AI shopping cart scan.
  • The tech is already in place in ten US locations and will expand nationwide this year.
  • Waiting for receipt checks at the exit has long been a source of frustration for shoppers.

Shopping trips to Sam's Club are about to get a little shorter — at the exit, at least.

The Walmart-owned warehouse club said Tuesday it is ditching physical receipt checks in favor of an AI-powered scan of members' shopping carts as they roll out of the store.

"Eliminating even the few seconds it takes to scan a receipt at the exit door is well worth it," Sam's Club US Chief Merchant Megan Crozier said in the company's keynote presentation at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

During the presentation, Walmart played a video demonstration of the tech portraying two versions of the same shopper. The tech-savvy shopper teaches her less-savvy counterpart to scan items with the Sam's Club mobile app and pay on the app.

As the shoppers leave the store, the less tech-savvy shopper says: "Wait, you have to show your receipt!" Her counterpart passes through a large blue gateway to scan her items.

The gateway is equipped with an array of cameras and sensors that capture images of the shopper's cart, recognize individual items, and verify the purchase — all in real time.

AI recognizing items in a Sam's Club shopping cart.
Sam's Club's AI recognizes items in shopping carts.

"It's one thing to enable this easy kind of exit tech in a small-footprint store for a handful of items," Crozier said, throwing shade at competitors' tech, like Amazon's Just Walk Out. "You've all seen it: you can get an apple, a cheese stick, maybe something as big as a box of cereal, but we're doing it at scale."

The tech is currently installed in ten locations, and the company says all of its nearly 600 US warehouses will have it by the end of this year.

While receipt checks are a fact of life for shoppers at warehouse clubs like Sam's and Costco, they are still a source of frustration for many, especially when stores are busy and exit lines are long.

Other tech, like the in-app scan and pay feature, has found its way into Walmart stores after being first introduced and tested with Sam's Club shoppers, so it stands to reason that this latest innovation could eventually do the same.

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