Toronto Star

DoorDash will start a dedicated alcohol delivery service in Canada, the U.S. and Australia.

Company to offer beer, wine, spirits across U.S., Canada and Australia

- JACKIE DAVALOS

DoorDash Inc. is starting a dedicated alcohol delivery service, advancing a push into non-food categories as the battle for ondemand delivery intensifie­s with Uber Technologi­es Inc. and Instacart Inc.

DoorDash will offer beer, wine, and spirits through the DoorDash Marketplac­e in 20 U.S. states and Washington as well as Canada and Australia, the company announced on Monday. Customers will be able to order alcohol offerings from grocery stores, restaurant­s and other local merchants through a new “Alcohol” tab in the DoorDash app.

Alcohol delivery exploded during the pandemic as COVID-19 restrictio­ns shifted happy hour from bars and restaurant­s to people’s homes. Lawmakers in many states temporaril­y relaxed regulation­s to make alcohol available for home delivery and pickup. Ecommerce made up just one per cent of U.S. alcohol sales by retailers in 2019 by volume but is expected to grow to seven per cent by 2024, according the Wine & Spirits Wholesaler­s of America, an industry trade group.

The boom has created an opportunit­y for delivery giants to capitalize on the higher-margin category. It’s also a boon for restaurant­s as adding alcohol could increase average order values by as much as 30 per cent, according to DoorDash chief operating officer Christophe­r Payne.

“It’s a win-win for everyone. Customers have a wider selection, restaurant­s can achieve greater sales and Dashers can earn more,” he said.

The San Francisco-based company commanded 57 per cent of the food-delivery market as of August and has seen sustained growth across segments even as indoor dining has resumed. The dedicated alcohol operation, which counts more than 10,000 retailers, will also benefit from DoubleDash, a feature that lets customers shop from multiple stores and bundle them into a single order. DoorDash’s move heats up competitio­n with Uber, which purchased on-demand alcohol delivery app Drizly Inc. for $1.1 billion (U.S.) in February.

Because regulation­s around alcohol delivery differ city-tocity, the new offering will be available only in select markets. DoorDash has ramped up its lobbying efforts alongside the restaurant industry and have seen “great traction” as legislator­s have been keen to help businesses that were battered when the pandemic shuttered eateries, Payne said.

DoorDash will employ ID verificati­on prior to checkout and by couriers before delivery to ensure customers are 21 years old or older, the company said in a statement.

The company has been delivering alcohol from restaurant­s and through its Drive service, which handles orders from a merchant’s website rather than through the regular DoorDash Marketplac­e app.

 ?? ERIC BARADAT AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? DoorDash’s alcohol operation, which counts more than 10,000 retailers, will benefit from DoubleDash, which lets customers shop from multiple stores and bundle them into a single order.
ERIC BARADAT AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES DoorDash’s alcohol operation, which counts more than 10,000 retailers, will benefit from DoubleDash, which lets customers shop from multiple stores and bundle them into a single order.

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