Skip to main content

Checkers is testing SA’s 1st smart trolley – with built-in scanner & automated checkout

| Innovation and technology

Checkers has launched South Africa’s first smart shopping trolley, pioneering a major step towards a frictionless, technology-led in-store experience.

Called the Xpress Trolley, it allows shoppers to scan-and-bag items as they go, track a live running total, and pay directly on the trolley without needing to stand in a queue or bag products at a traditional till point.

Built by the ShopriteX innovation team, the Xpress Trolley is designed to put customers in control of their shopping experience from check-in to check-out. A user-friendly screen guides shoppers through their journey, displaying real-time product details, personalised promotions, and a running total that helps them keep tabs on their spending as they go.

The screen also assists with in-store navigation by indicating where products are located within the store, making it easier for shoppers to find what they want and need without trawling the supermarket.

Following initial testing with Home Office employees at Checkers Hyper Brackenfell from mid-August, 10 trolleys will be made available to customers at this store as well as another 10 trolleys at Checkers Constantia.

Here’s how the Xpress Trolley works:

  • Scan an Xtra Savings card below the screen mounted on the trolley to start shopping.
  • Place the shopping bags provided into the trolley.
  • Scan each item’s barcode before placing it into the trolley.
  • Track a live basket total, view product info and activate personalised promotions.
  • Head to the dedicated checkout lane and pay directly from the trolley using the bank card saved on a customer’s Checkers Sixty60 profile.
  • Take the printed till slip and exit via the checkout gate – no need to visit a till point – with a concierge on hand for support.

“The Xpress Trolley enhances convenience, improves speed, and keeps customers in control from the moment they enter the store to the moment they leave. Smart trolleys aren’t about the novelty of screens on trolleys – they’re about giving shoppers real-time control, creating a compelling shopping experience.

“We are also excited about the potential it holds for Sixty60’s in-store pickers, specifically the additional speed and accuracy with which the in-store picking process can be completed.” 

Learnings from the trial forms part of the Shoprite Group’s broader strategy to become South Africa’s most profitable and seamless omnichannel retailer. While smart trolleys have been rolled out in some international supermarkets, this is the first time they’re being trialled locally – and the Group will use insights from this pilot to continue shaping the future of retail in South Africa.

  • Checkers has unveiled South Africa’s first smart trolley equipped with a range of technology designed to enhance the shopping experience.
  • Called the Xpress Trolley, it lets shoppers scan as they shop and skip the checkout queue by paying directly on the cart.
  • The trolleys are being trialled at two Checkers stores in the Western Cape.
Pin It

Related Articles

The Shoprite Group, South Africa’s largest private employer, has rolled out an advanced digital recruitment platform designed to connect people with jobs in their own communities. 
By Blake Raubenheimer, Omnichannel Executive at SPAR Group As South Africa moves deeper into the digital retail decade, partnerships like SPAR and Uber Eats show how innovation can serve inclusion. They reveal how technology, often seen as disrupti…
South Africans will soon be able to apply for Smart IDs and passports at Pick n Pay, Boxer and TFG outlets, following a new partnership between the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) and TymeBank.
By: Lorna Hopkin, retail specialist, EMEA, Zebra Technologies Your jeans and nearly all other products sold in the European Union (EU) will soon require their own travel document – a Digital Product Passport (DPP), containing comprehensive informat…
Rosebank Mall has flipped the switch on what is believed to be South Africa’s largest commercial hybrid energy system.