Aldi shopper complains about Aldi’s trolley return system
- Replies 31
Among the supermarket chains operating in Australia today, Aldi is probably the most well known for offering customers cheap and quality options.
But aside from their amazing markdown deals, there is another thing that differentiates Aldi from the other grocery chains, and that is their trolleys.
Unlike Woolies or Coles, Aldi requires their shoppers to commit to a small, refundable gold coin deposit to use their shopping trolleys.
Ever since the supermarket giant came to Australia in 2001, they have always used coin-operated trolleys in hopes to encourage their customers to return the trolleys to the store – a key preventative measure against trolleys being dumped in backstreets, waterways and public areas.
“As a result, we find almost all of our trolleys are returned to our stores,” said an Aldi spokesperson. “By incentivising customers to return their own trolleys, we save money on trolley retrieval services and pass those savings on to customers in the form of our low prices.”
The mechanics behind the idea is pretty simple: pay a small fee for a token to use the trolley, and to get your money back, just clip the cart into another Aldi trolley or chain.
However, this is not the case for everyone every time, such as this one shopper who said that Aldi’s trolley return system was more inconvenient than helpful.
One Aldi shopper discovered there were no trolleys in the bays for him to redeem his coin back. Credit: news.com.au.
The man said that after he was done shopping at Aldi’s Lake Haven store in NSW, he went to the carpark downstairs to unpack his groceries into his car.
Once he had finished loading his groceries, it was time to return the trolley to the trolley bay and retrieve his gold coin. Simple enough, right?
However, there were no available release chains or trolleys in the bay. Meaning, he would have to take the trolley all the way upstairs to get his deposit back.
“Just a pain because this particular Aldi is in a shopping complex,” he added.
When he wrote an email to a store representative, he was only met with a generic response, saying “thank you” for his report.
The man’s post on social media was met with mixed reactions from fellow Aldi shoppers, but most of them said that they have been in a similar “annoying” situation.
One user said that most of the time, the chain is missing at the designated Aldi trolley bay. Other times, it is filled with trolleys from others stores like Coles and Woolies.
Meanwhile, some suggested that it would be easier to take the complaint to the store’s manager. One person even shared: “I’ve had two issues and the store has gladly reissued me with a token free of charge.”