Food-Delivery Services Will Struggle to Outrun Inflation

Inflation is coming for consumers’ pricey pandemic habits.

Whether choosing restaurant dinners delivered to their door or at-home meal kits, many Americans have prioritized convenience over cost for the past two years. Food-delivery was a big beneficiary. Some of the top platforms including DoorDash Inc. and Uber Eats enjoyed triple-digit growth rates, supercharged by Covid fears and the suspension of restaurant dining. Similarly, meal-kit provider Blue Apron Holdings Inc. was struggling before the pandemic and considering putting itself up for sale. But when the virus hit, thousands of customers flocked to its service.

Now accelerating inflation, combined with easing fears about eating in restaurants as Covid cases drop, threaten to deflate the delivery boom. Inflation in particular is likely to prompt consumers to re-evaluate their spending and look to trim outlays they deem less than essential. And many could decide that having home delivery multiple times a month or ordering ice cream on the spur of the moment from a fast grocery service like Gorillas could be given up without too much disruption to daily life.

Already, fewer Americans report ordering takeout for delivery, according to the most recent monthly survey of food and beverage habits by Morning Consult. It doesn’t help that these services are getting more expensive. For a start, food inflation will elevate costs at restaurants that use services like Just Eat Takeaway.com NV’s Grubhub for deliveries. The average check across restaurants, takeout and home delivery rose 7% in 2021 compared with 2020, according to data provider NPD Group.

What’s more, there are other choices available, such as buying a meal from a value player such as Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. Morning Consult found that ordering takeout for pickup has remained more stable than other categories.

Americans also could simply take a trip to the grocery store. While food retailers face their own cost challenges, they are positioning themselves to benefit from consumers trading down.