SubwayGrocery-03.jpg Subway
Curbside pickup of Subway Grocery purchases can be ready in an hour at some locations.

Subway testing 'Subway Grocery' in 100 Southern California restaurants

Fast-food chain offering contactless curbside pickup or delivery of everything from footlong breads to bulk bacon

More than 100 Subway restaurants in Southern California are turning into makeshift grocery stores, selling restaurant ingredients such as bagged lettuce and frozen soups to consumers looking for a safe and fast way to obtain groceries.

Dubbed Subway Grocery, the beta program allows customers to buy online items such as baked bread, deli meats, sliced cheese, vegetables and soups. Curbside pickup orders can be ready in an hour at some locations. Delivery orders, available in half of the locations, are made the same day usually within two to three hours.

It’s unclear if the Milford, Conn.-based company plans to expand the test nationwide. Subway, which recently laid off 300 corporate workers, has nearly 24,800 restaurants in the U.S.

“Before we run, we need to walk,” said development agent Bob Grewal, who owns the master development rights for Subway restaurants in Orange County, Los Angeles, Virginia, Washington D.C., Maryland and Ontario, Canada.

Grewal, a veteran development agent for the sandwich chain, started the Subway Grocery program about 10 days ago at a handful of stores in Orange County. 

The idea was to give consumers a safe and fast way to obtain certain groceries, while also allowing franchisees to supplement off-premise orders. In locations that do delivery, it also allows restaurants to keep more employees on staff. 

Subwaysubwaygrocery-02.jpg

Prices in the Subway Grocery program vary depending on whether items are sold in bulk or as individual items. For instance, footlong breads cost $1.50 each, while a pack of 150 slices of pre-cooked bacon cost $35.75.

Deliveries are free within 5 miles of a store for orders totaling $45 or more.  Prices vary as some items are sold in bulk or as individual items. Footlong breads cost $1.50 each, while a pack of 150 slices of pre-cooked bacon cost $35.75. A three-pound pack of sliced Black Forest Ham cost $18.40. Shoppers can even buy whole egg patties used in breakfast sandwiches. Cost: $9.98 for a dozen whole egg or egg white patties. 

Stores are only selling deli items. Supplies such as toilet paper are not being sold. 

Grewal said customers are “extremely thankful that they are able to get fresh food either picked up or delivered to their home.”

By Friday, he expects about 500 restaurants in Southern California to come online.

“It’s getting bigger and bigger,” he said.

Subway franchisee Daniel Riscalla helped develop the software that supports the online ordering platform through his technology company Zippyum. 

All five of his Subway stores are participating in the grocery experiment. He said offering groceries helps “on all fronts” as it allows him to supplement his income, while also giving customers the ability to buy items in a timely manner.

Consumers can also give back to front line workers while making orders. The Subway Grocery menu features a “First Responder Subs”
program (#sendsubs), allowing consumers to donate sandwiches with their grocery orders or as standalone donations.

Local Southern California Subway restaurants will then deliver donated subs to local doctors, nurses, police, fire, and emergency medical workers daily to say “thank you” for serving us on
the frontlines, Subway said in a statement.

“In today’s environment, everything is upside down. This creates a sense of community and a sense of hope for everybody,” Riscalla said.

For our most up-to-date coverage, visit the coronavirus homepage.

Hide comments

Comments

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <blockquote> <br> <p>

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Publish