By Vance Carriga, April 4, 2022
You can add one more big name to the list of retailers that now accept Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) EBT cards for online food orders. Target is preparing to let shoppers use the cards, formerly known as food stamps, for online purchases, joining fellow retail giants Walmart and Amazon.com.
Target told Reuters last week that it will begin to accept online payments through the Shipt service, its delivery unit. The retailer set a tentative start date of late April 2022. The service also will include drive-up and pick-up orders.
SNAP is a federal program for families who need financial assistance to buy food. Eligible consumers used to pay with food stamps but today use reloadable Electronic Benefits Transfer cards. The cards can only be used for eligible food items and not for non-food purchases such as alcoholic beverages, tobacco products, vitamins, medicines, supplements, cleaning supplies, paper products and cosmetics.
Allowing EBT payments for online orders could help Target reach lower-income consumers who might otherwise shop at less expensive dollar store chains or at chief rival Walmart. The move might also build a long-term customer base Target didn’t previously have.
“Target is kind of taking the long view, saying you can use your food stamps now,” David Klink, senior equity analyst at Huntington Private Bank, told Reuters. “But maybe at some point you won’t depend on food stamps and you’ll remember that Target was there for your various shopping needs. I wouldn’t call it a game-changer, but I think it is important.”
In addition to Target, Walmart and Amazon.com, most leading grocery chains also accept EBT cards for online orders, including Aldi and Food Lion.
Grocery sales account for about one-fifth of Target’s overall revenue, so they are an important part of its business. Its grocery sales now are competitive with leading pure-play grocery chains like Kroger and Albertsons.
Target’s strategy is to make its entire experience, both in-store and online, “accessible to all families, allowing them to shop on their terms regardless of how they pay for their groceries,” Chief Food and Beverage Officer Richard Gomez recently told investors.
The retailer’s house brand, Good & Gather, offers nearly 2,500 food and beverage products that are priced to steer customers away from name brands. For example, Target sells a 12-ounce can of Good & Gather evaporated milk for $0.99 on its website, Reuters reported — well below the $1.69 charged for a can of Nestle’s Carnation condensed milk.
“Target will put a leading national brand like Nestle on a display, but put the Target (private-label) item right next to it, to get the consumer to cross over,” said Burt Flickinger, managing director at Strategic Resource Group, a consulting firm.
Update: In an email to GOBankingRates, a Target spokesperson offered this statement: “Later this year, Target guests will have the ability to pay for SNAP-eligible grocery items on Target.com and via our mobile website as an enhancement to existing SNAP payment capabilities in-store. Guests will be able to shop across Target’s broad food and beverage assortment and use our fast and contactless same-day services Order Pick Up and Drive Up, making it even easier and more convenient to shop with us.”
Strategic Resource Group is the lead retail and brand CPG consulting firm throughout the United States and the globe. With more than three decades of experience, our team strategically collaborates with top retail chains, wholesalers, suppliers, and investment firms. Our retail industry experts are highly skilled at illuminating retail trends, identifying opportunities to increase consumption, and growing retail sales.
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