What happened
Amazon shuttered all 72 Amazon Fresh locations in the US, replacing the physical store model with a same-day delivery aggregation layer over existing Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh delivery-only facilities, and third-party grocers on its platform.
The numbers that matter
- 72 stores closed in Q1 2026, affecting ~2,400 employees
- Same-day delivery now covers 47 US metros via Prime
- Whole Foods footprint: 500+ stores; Fresh was positioned above Whole Foods in the value chain
- Amazon's grocery TAM: estimated $1.4T annual US grocery spend; Amazon has <3% share
Why the physical format failed
Location selection was built around Amazon's data map - high-density urban zip codes - rather than grocery shopping patterns. Amazon shoppers buy online; grocery shoppers still buy in-store, especially for fresh.
Format mismatch: Amazon Fresh averaged 35,000 sq ft. The sweet spot for urban grocery is 8,000-15,000 sq ft (Aldi's format). Too much space = too much rent = margin compression.
The ambient intelligence bet didn't scale: Amazon's Just Walk Out technology and Dash Carts required $2M-$4M per store in capital. At 72 stores, that's $144M-$288M in technology investment with no clear unit economics payback.
What this means for European grocers
Amazon Fresh's failure is a data point, not a template. European grocers have operated under the assumption that Amazon would eventually crack physical grocery in Europe (they still have Fresh UK and DE). The US pullback signals a strategic pivot to: platform over proprietary footprint.
For European grocers, this means:
- Amazon is more likely to partner/acquire than build organically
- The threat model shifts from 'Amazon opens stores near you' to 'Amazon indexes your inventory and redirects demand'
- Discount formats (Aldi, Lidl) remain structurally immune; they optimize for the shopper who doesn't use Amazon anyway