Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fast food kiosks an issue for cash users

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McDonald’s Corp. has pitched self-ordering kiosks as a key part of its plans to boost sales by improving technology and renovating restaurant­s. But it turns out the kiosks aren’t usable by a significan­t slice of McDonald’s customers: cash payers.

The Big Mac seller is leaning hard into digital ordering and technology improvemen­ts to attract on-the-go customers, but a recent test shows the kiosks may need to be replaced or retrofitte­d to accommodat­e cash transactio­ns. About 6.5% — or 8.4 million — of U.S. households don’t have a bank account or a debit or credit card, preventing them from using McDonald’s kiosks that are in about 9,000 domestic locations.

That’s problemati­c for the company because franchisee­s have been bearing much of the cost for renovation­s that include the kiosks and creating a more modern look. Many restaurant owners have already paid as much as $750,000 per store for the kiosks and other improvemen­ts.

“As part of McDonald’s efforts to identify the best experience for customers and employees, we are al

ways testing new approaches to meet customer demand,” the company said in an emailed statement. It confirmed it’s testing kiosks that accept cash in a “small handful of U.S. restaurant­s.”

The kiosks, which started being used in the U.S. in 2015, quickly became a focus of former Chief Executive Officer Steve Easterbroo­k, who said last month that touchscree­n ordering

is increasing worldwide. He noted that diners usually spend more when ordering via kiosk, and said in July that 40% of in-store customers used one in Australia and major European markets.

“Potentiall­y the franchisee could have to pay,” said John Gordon, principal at restaurant adviser Pacific Management Consulting Group. He called the oversight for the kiosks a “mistake” and said the world’s biggest restaurant company “should have thought about that.”

He estimates that 30% of fast-food customers use cash in the U.S. McDonald’s says that worldwide, 40% to 60% of its diners use cash.

“Lower income people just don’t have access to credit cards; they’re paying with a lot of things in cash,” Gordon said. “Why should they not have the same access to personaliz­ation, or to get in and out quickly if there’s a line?”

McDonald’s says the kiosks offer a faster ordering experience and that some cash-paying customers have said they want to be able to use them.

Cashless restaurant­s, including Dos Toros Taqueria, have faced criticism that they discrimina­te against low-income consumers who may not have bank accounts. Amazon. com’s Go grocery markets and the Sweetgreen salad chain reversed their no-cash policies earlier this year.

Cities and states are starting to ban cashless stores. Philadelph­ia and San Francisco have such rules in place now and other municipali­ties are weighing similar measures.

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