
A dark store (also dark shop, dark supermarket or dotcom centre) is a retail outlet or
distribution centre that exists exclusively for
online shopping
Online shopping is a form of electronic commerce which allows consumers to directly buy goods or services from a seller over the Internet using a web browser or a mobile app. Consumers find a product of interest by visiting the website of th ...
.
A dark store is generally a large warehouse that can be used either to facilitate a "click-and-collect" service, where a customer collects an item they have ordered online, or as an order fulfillment platform for online sales.
The format was initiated in the United Kingdom, and its popularity has also spread to France followed by the rest of the European Union and Russia, as well as to the United States.
, many companies were competing to provide rapid delivery of groceries. Most were financed by
venture capital
Venture capital (VC) is a form of private equity financing provided by firms or funds to start-up company, startup, early-stage, and emerging companies, that have been deemed to have high growth potential or that have demonstrated high growth in ...
, and were fighting for
market share
Market share is the percentage of the total revenue or sales in a Market (economics), market that a company's business makes up. For example, if there are 50,000 units sold per year in a given industry, a company whose sales were 5,000 of those ...
and prepared to take initial large losses in doing so. Professor
Annabelle Gawer, director of the Centre of Digital Economy at the
University of Surrey
The University of Surrey is a public research university in Guildford, Surrey, England. The university received its Royal Charter, royal charter in 1966, along with a Plate glass university, number of other institutions following recommendations ...
, pointed out that the industry being disrupted is not food supply, but local delivery. Gawer asserts "delivery has never been a profitable industry".
Concept

Not open to the public, the interior of a dark supermarket may appear like a conventional supermarket, set out with aisles of shelves containing groceries and other retail items. However, without having to deal with retail customers, the stores are not located in the high street or shopping centers, but mostly in areas that are preferred for good road connections.
The buildings are often utilitarian and undistinguished from the outside.
Inside, the stores dispense with assistants who provide product advice, check-out counters and point of sale displays.
After orders received via the Internet are processed, the orders are sent to the shop floor.
These electronically generated orders, processed and routed according to the store layout for optimal picking, are picked by store employees, known as "personal shoppers" (colloquially "pickers"), who work around the clock fulfilling the orders displayed on a
tablet computer
A tablet computer, commonly shortened to tablet, is a mobile device, typically with a mobile operating system and touchscreen display processing circuitry, and a rechargeable battery in a single, thin and flat package. Tablets, being computers ...
attached to their
shopping trolley. More than one order can often be collected simultaneously.
Tesco
Tesco plc () is a British multinational groceries and general merchandise retailer headquartered in the United Kingdom at its head offices in Welwyn Garden City, England. The company was founded by Jack Cohen (businessman), Sir Jack Cohen in ...
opened a "fourth generation dotcom store" in
Erith
Erith () is an area in south-east London, England, east of Charing Cross. Before the creation of Greater London in 1965, it was in the historical county of Kent. Since 1965 it has formed part of the London Borough of Bexley. It lies north ...
in October 2013 with a much larger product range – 30,000 lines – and higher degree of mechanization that brings items to pickers rather than requiring them to collect individual products manually.
Fulfilled orders are then delivered to the customer by a fleet of vans.
A certain time of day, usually in the early hours of the morning, is set aside for stock replenishment.
In the United States,
Toys-R-Us adopted a version of the dark store model, but it uses existing stores as warehouses.
Traditional and online operations converge as the company uses their parked inventory to deliver online orders.
While most popular dark stores serve groceries, some of them are clothing shops, helping brands to cut costs. Dark stores are less costly to operate not only because they are located in cheaper rental areas, but also because of the reduced picking cost. A dark store-picked grocery order costs a company around £12, which is significantly lower than the £18-£20 cost per grocery order picked at a traditional store.
The format is also popular in France, where, , some 2,000 dark stores operated for the "click-and-collect" model.
Growth in popularity
The first UK supermarket to trial the concept of a specific store for online goods was
Sainsbury's
J Sainsbury plc, trading as Sainsbury's, is a British supermarket and the second-largest chain of supermarkets in the United Kingdom.
Founded in 1869 by John James Sainsbury with a shop in Drury Lane, London, the company was the largest UK r ...
, which operated a distribution center at
Park Royal in London during the early 2000s, but the retailer closed the outlet because of a low order quantity.
It was over a decade afterwards, in October 2013, that they announced plans for another, at
Bromley-by-Bow, in East London.
The term 'dark store' originally appeared in the UK in 2009 when
Tesco
Tesco plc () is a British multinational groceries and general merchandise retailer headquartered in the United Kingdom at its head offices in Welwyn Garden City, England. The company was founded by Jack Cohen (businessman), Sir Jack Cohen in ...
opened their first such supermarkets in
Croydon
Croydon is a large town in South London, England, south of Charing Cross. Part of the London Borough of Croydon, a Districts of England, local government district of Greater London; it is one of the largest commercial districts in Greater Lond ...
, Surrey, and
Aylesford, Kent. At the time, Tesco were receiving around 475,000 orders per week which were being fulfilled from its existing retail supermarkets.
Supermarkets began opening dark stores to assist with distribution in geographical areas where there was a high demand for online delivery.
Retail companies with dark stores usually operate fleets of light trucks to deliver orders made online, particularly to inner urban areas, avoiding disruptions to offline store operations.
The dark store format was seen by Tesco as a more efficient way of dealing with the expansion in online sales. The retailer planned to open one dark store per year "for the foreseeable future".
By 2013, Tesco had opened six dotcom centers in and around London, and was responsible for 47.5% of online deliveries made in the UK.
The latest of these was a store that opened in Erith in October 2013. The industry publication ''
Retail Gazette'' described the store as a "fourth generation dotcom store" because of the greater emphasis on a mechanised system that brought items to pickers rather than requiring them to collect individual products manually, while chilled goods are conveyed directly from refrigerator to delivery van. The Erith store holds a range of 30,000 products, and has a capacity to process 4,000 online orders a day.
In November 2012, Zoe Wood of ''
The Guardian
''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in Manchester in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'' and changed its name in 1959, followed by a move to London. Along with its sister paper, ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardi ...
'' reported that a number of dark stores had been opened by major supermarket chains in the UK, including Tesco and
Waitrose
Waitrose Limited, trading as Waitrose & Partners, is a British supermarket chain, founded in 1904 as Waite, Rose & Taylor, later shortened to Waitrose. In 1937, it was acquired by the John Lewis Partnership, the UK's largest employee-owned b ...
, with more planned.
Waitrose opened their first online distribution center at the site of a former
John Lewis
John Robert Lewis (February 21, 1940 – July 17, 2020) was an American civil rights activist and politician who served in the United States House of Representatives for from 1987 until his death in 2020. He participated in the 1960 Nashville ...
warehouse in London in April 2011, and in September 2013 announced plans for a second, purpose-built center at
Coulsdon that would open in 2014.
The company had previously used the
Ocado distribution service to dispatch its goods to customers, but wished to commence its own delivery service.
In 2020,
Amazon
Amazon most often refers to:
* Amazon River, in South America
* Amazon rainforest, a rainforest covering most of the Amazon basin
* Amazon (company), an American multinational technology company
* Amazons, a tribe of female warriors in Greek myth ...
-owned US retailer
Whole Foods opened its first purpose-built online only dark store, in Brooklyn.
[
In 2021, a report produced by OneStock indicated that more than 67% of consumers across Europe had used the dark store format during the ]COVID-19 pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic (also known as the coronavirus pandemic and COVID pandemic), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), began with an disease outbreak, outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China, in December ...
, either to click and collect goods or through online delivery. In the UK, data produced by the Local Data Company in 2021 indicated that 8,700 High Street stores had closed during the first half of 2021 as a result of the pandemic. An increased demand for online retail had prompted many retailers to repurpose their traditional stores to fulfil online orders. In September 2021, ''Internet Retailing'' magazine reported that 84% of UK consumers had purchased from a dark store since the pandemic, with said figure rising to 91% in the 25–44 age group.
In January 2022, the city of Amsterdam froze the opening of new dark stores because of noise and increased scooter traffic near these stores. The appearance of the stores was also deemed undesirable. In May 2022, New York City began cracking down on dark stores that violated zoning laws by operating as warehouses in retail areas, requiring businesses to allow in-store shopping or relocate to areas of the city zoned for manufacturing.
See also
*
*
*
*
*
References
{{Retail
Supermarkets
Shopping delivery services
Online retailers