Tesco currently offers same day home delivery slots starting from 7pm, and click and collect from 4pm – but now, same-day home delivery will begin from 1am and click and collect will start from 12pm
Tesco has added more same-day delivery slots to over 400 stores.
The move means same-day delivery slots will now be available at the supermarket earlier in the day in these locations. Tesco currently offers same day home delivery slots starting from 7pm, and click and collect from 4pm – but now, same-day home delivery will begin from 1am and click and collect will start from 12pm.
Shoppers will be able to amend their order by 8:45am on that day. Tom Denyard, Tesco Online Managing Director, said: “We are excited to have rolled out more same-day opportunities for customers to get an online slot, offering customers more spaces – and therefore more flexibility – than ever before. This allows them to book closer to their delivery or collection time and therefore improve our market-leading customer experience.”
Tesco charges £7.99 a month for a six-month Anytime delivery pass, which includes same-day delivery, or £6.99 a month if you sign up for 12 months. For click and collect, a six-month package is charged at £2.49 a month. The update to its same-day delivery comes after Tesco revealed it has expanded its Marketplace website.
Tesco Marketplace was launched in June 2024 and lists products for sale from third-party sellers. Orders are delivered separately from your grocery shop, with marketplace items incurring their own, separate delivery fees. However, you still earn Tesco Clubcard points on all purchases. All the sellers who use Tesco Marketplace are monitored on delivery speed, returns, and delivery success rates.
The website now reads: “Your one-stop shop just got a whole lot bigger, now with over 300,000 products delivered direct by our sellers. From the essentials to the unexpected, we’ve got it all. Why not take a look around?” At its launch last year, Tesco Marketplace director Peter Filcek told The Grocer it wants shoppers to have a “one-stop shop” for everything they need.
He said: “We were looking at customer searches on our websites and we found things that we just don’t carry in Tesco [stores] or online, and so that prompted a stream of thinking around what we could do to open up that range, to give customers what they’re looking for because they were genuinely looking for all sorts of things.”