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Walmart Expands Last-Mile Delivery Capabilities with 30-Minute Service and Subway Partnership

By MGN EditorialJune 8, 2026 at 12:27 PM

Walmart is accelerating its e-commerce logistics push with a new 30-minute delivery offering, a Subway sandwich delivery tie-in, and membership program expansion into Canada.

## Walmart Pushes Deeper into Last-Mile Logistics with Bundled Delivery Offerings Retail and logistics giant Walmart is intensifying its last-mile delivery strategy with a series of new initiatives that blur the lines between retail fulfilment and food service, according to FreightWaves. The company has launched a 30-minute delivery service, positioning itself to compete more directly with rapid-delivery platforms that have reshaped consumer expectations in recent years. Alongside this, Walmart is leveraging its in-store Subway restaurant locations to offer sandwich delivery bundled with parcel orders — a move that underscores the growing convergence of grocery, foodservice, and e-commerce logistics. The retailer is also expanding its membership programme, which includes free delivery benefits, into the Canadian market. The programme mirrors the model employed by Amazon Prime and other subscription-based fulfilment services, aiming to drive customer loyalty while increasing delivery volume density — a key factor in making last-mile operations economically viable. ### Implications for Freight and Supply Chain Operators While these developments are retail-facing, they carry meaningful implications for the broader freight and supply chain sector. The push toward sub-30-minute delivery windows places significant pressure on urban logistics infrastructure, warehouse positioning, and carrier networks. Retailers of Walmart's scale increasingly function as de facto logistics operators, investing in proprietary delivery fleets, fulfilment technology, and supply chain integration. For freight professionals, the trend signals continued growth in demand for micro-fulfilment facilities, last-mile carrier capacity, and real-time inventory visibility systems. The bundling of food delivery with parcel logistics also points to further consolidation of delivery trips — a development with potential efficiency gains for urban freight movement. As e-commerce volumes continue to grow globally, initiatives like Walmart's reflect the broader industry shift toward faster, more integrated delivery ecosystems that challenge traditional freight and courier models. *Source: FreightWaves*
#last-mile delivery#e-commerce logistics#supply chain#retail freight#urban logistics#fulfilment

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