Same-day delivery is shifting from a race for speed to a test of reliability. Retailers that win aren’t just the fastest; they’re the ones that consistently deliver on the promises they make.
For years, last-mile delivery operated on the same logic as Formula One: The fastest car wins. Retailers and logistics providers raced to shrink delivery windows from weeks to days, days to hours, and hours to minutes. The scoreboard was simple:
Companies built their entire operations around that logic, until customers started caring about something else entirely. Shoppers aren't just clocking how fast a package arrives anymore. They're asking whether it arrived when and how the retailer said it would.
That's an entirely different race, and one where a lead foot is no longer enough to win.
This blog looks at how expectations for speed and certainty differ across key consumer groups, and what those insights mean for retailers aiming to drive ROI while strengthening customer relationships.
Same-day delivery used to feel like a luxury that online shoppers reached for only in a pinch. Today, a growing share of buyers expect it as a matter of course, but not in the “white knuckle, get it here in two hours” way that many retailers assume.
New Roadie research of over 1,000 consumers who’ve used same-day delivery in the past six months puts hard numbers behind that pivot. It also shows who’s leading the charge, with the heaviest users skewing younger and urban:
The survey also chips away at the assumption that frequent users always demand same-day. Three-quarters (73%) still consider one- to two-day delivery perfectly fine. Same-day delivery is more of a security blanket than a necessity, something shoppers want available even when they don't reach for it.
Same-day doesn't have to involve a bicycle courier racing across town, weaving through traffic with a backpack stuffed full of packages. It means showing up when you said you would. Retailers who get that right — complete with consistent cutoff times, realistic promises and real-time updates — win on loyalty, not just speed.
So what does winning on loyalty actually look like? It starts with an understanding of what shoppers value. For shoppers who've used same-day before, just knowing a retailer offers it signals that the seller can deliver under pressure, even when they don't need it right now.
The bottom line: Customers aren’t demanding speed every time, but they do want the option. Here’s proof from the Roadie survey:
The survey also found that younger shoppers are the most willing to open their wallets when they want something delivered within 24 hours or less. Combining the “Yes” and “Maybe” responses to that question, 94% of both Gen Z and millennials will pay extra (at least situationally), along with 83% of Gen X. Just 59% of Baby Boomers say the same.
Finally, urban shoppers are more than twice as likely as suburban shoppers to pay for speed, which aligns with their heavier usage overall and makes sense in cities where fighting traffic or circling for parking can turn a quick store run into a two-hour ordeal.
In Formula One, the fastest car doesn't always win the championship. The winning team shows up prepared, executes cleanly and knows exactly when to pit for a tire change. Same-day delivery works the same way: Online shoppers don't remember if a delivery took 20 or 120 minutes, but they know you showed up as promised.
Some companies are still playing catch-up, leaving the track wide open for retailers that shift their focus from just speed to combining speed with reliability and predictability. Research from Roadie also shows where retailers are losing ground. More than a quarter of same-day users have abandoned a purchase because no same-day option was available, and nearly three-quarters have switched retailers to get faster delivery of the same item.
That's revenue walking right out the door. Winning it back starts with the basics:
The same-day delivery race isn't over, it's just changed course. Shoppers still want speed, but what keeps them coming back is knowing a retailer will do what it said it would do. The brands that get that right, and can deliver on it consistently at scale, will own customer loyalty for the long haul. By combining the efficiency of a UPS company with a flexible crowdsourced driver network, Roadie helps retailers meet and exceed those expectations, one delivered promise at a time.