We’ve been hearing how shoplifting is on the rise and new research reveals one source of it: self-checkout counters. According to a new Lending Tree survey of 2-thousand U.S. consumers, 15% of shoppers of all ages admit they’ve stolen items from self-checkout kiosks. But that number doubles to 31% for Gen Z consumers giving themselves a five-finger discount.
"Ultimately, retailers need to decide whether the self-checkout terminals are worth the risk," LendingTree chief credit analyst Matt Schulz says. "That's a question lots of retailers are likely wrestling with."
The survey also reveals:
- While some with sticky fingers regret their thievery, 44% say they plan to continue stealing from self-checkouts.
- That may be because it’s easy to get away with, as only a third who’ve done it have ever been caught.
- But some folks are selective about what they’re willing to take, 37% say they’d only steal from self-checkouts to save money on groceries or health care products.
- And it turns out, some people are shoplifting by mistake. While 79% of self-checkout users are diligently making sure each item gets scanned, 21% admit they’ve accidentally taken an item. But not all of them felt guilty enough to return it, as 61% say they kept the item they didn’t pay for.
Source: CBS News
Scott's Thoughts:
- And that’s just the number of people who are willing to admit they did it, the actual number of people stealing from self-checkouts has to be higher than this!
- I know that Walmart is using some kind of AI to watch for this with the cameras overhead! I had made a mistake on scanning multiple cans of cat food and it somehow knew and sent over the attendant.
- I can't steal. My mom would find out and beat me with a switch. Even as a full grown man.