Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Amazon’s same-day delivery service speeds up for some folks

While Amazon would prefer to deliver stuff without you even knowing you needed it, the company still wants to make things even more convenient for those who insist on hopping online to place their orders.

Recommended Videos

For Prime members who really hate waiting around after hitting the “buy” button, Amazon announced this week it’s taking steps to speed up its same-day delivery service.

Coming first to customers in Philadelphia, Phoenix, Orlando, and Dallas, shoppers can choose from among three million items, each one marked with a “Today by” label so that you know you can receive it in super-quick time.

It means that if you order something between midnight and 8 a.m., you’ll receive it by 1 p.m. Orders placed between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. will arrive by 6 p.m. Order between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. and you’ll get it by 10 p.m. And if you order as late as midnight, you can expect to see your package on your doorstep when you wake up (so long as the porch pirates haven’t reached it first).

It’s a big improvement on Amazon’s current same-day delivery service, which requires you to order before noon for delivery by 9 p.m.

Of course, Amazon has for a long time offered one- and two-hour deliveries with its Prime Now service, but locations are limited and it only covers around 20,000 items.

So how is Amazon able to speed up its same-delivery service and expand it to so many different products? “By storing need-it-today items in brand new facilities we built even closer to customers,” the company said in a blog post.

It describes the facilities as “first-of-their-kind buildings” designed to function as mini-fulfillment centers.

“These new facilities are in close proximity to customers, reducing the need for aircraft transport and generally decreasing the distance drivers have to travel to deliver packages to our customers,” the online shopping giant explained.

Amazon said the faster delivery speeds enabled by these new facilities will help it to lower its carbon emissions as per its Climate Pledge to be net-zero carbon by 2040, though some critics have said the company should set a much earlier target date.

Same-day delivery is free to Prime members on qualifying orders greater than $35, or with a $2.99 delivery fee on orders under $35. To see if same-day delivery is available in your area, customers can use Amazon’s zip code checker.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Amazon shows off new delivery drone ahead of trial service
Amazon's Prime Air delivery drone.

Almost a decade after Amazon founder Jeff Bezos revealed the company’s grand plan for drone delivery, it has yet to establish a regular service using the flying machines.

While the company has invested huge amounts of money in the initiative and assembled teams to design, build, and refine its delivery drone, various challenges mean the widespread rollout of a drone delivery service with package-carrying Amazon drones buzzing to customers’ homes still seems a ways off.

Read more
Samsung partners with Best Buy for free same-day pickup
Samsung Galaxy S20 in black, blue, pink, and gray colors.

Samsung has expanded its recent partnership with Best Buy to offer same-day pickup for customers purchasing items from the Samsung online store. 

The new “Get it Today” service allows customers to purchase select Samsung products directly from the company’s website and arrange to pick them up for free within just a few hours at their local Best Buy. 

Read more
This Amazon facility worth $1.5B is aiming to speed up your deliveries
boston couple unwanted amazon deliveries package

Amazon this week opened its $1.5 billion air hub in northern Kentucky, a massive facility that will enable the e-commerce giant to take even more control of its ever-expanding shipping operation as part of ongoing efforts to speed up customer deliveries.

The facility at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport will serve as the central hub for Amazon Air’s U.S. cargo network, processing millions of customer packages every week. Up to 100 Amazon-branded planes can use the facility at any one time, with as many as 200 Amazon flights per day coming in and out. Several thousand jobs have been created by its opening.

Read more