Americas In 1963, nearly 29.7 percent of consumers in the US had milk delivered, but by 1975 the number had dropped to 6.9 percent of total sales. By 2005, about 0.4% of consumers in the United States had their milk delivered, and a handful of companies had sprung up to offer the service. During the
2020 coronavirus outbreak, some remaining milkmen saw demand increase suddenly (similar to other grocery delivery services) due to concerns about the infection risk involved with shopping in stores.
Asia In India, milk is usually delivered using
milk churns, a practice that has ceased in western countries. On the road, they are put on any kind of vehicle. In big cities such as
Mumbai, milk churns are often transported in luggage compartments in local trains. In the Philippines, the milkman or milkmaid is called
lechero, as in Spanish-speaking countries. The tradition stemmed from the community production of
carabao milk, which the
lechero delivers fresh to their designated
barangay (village). The
lechero heritage used to be widely practiced in the country but declined after the introduction of store-bought milk during the American period. Nowadays, only a few communities have
lecheros, notably in
Nueva Ecija province, the milk capital of the Philippines.
Oceania In Australia, the delivery vehicle was usually a small petrol or diesel truck with a covered milk-tray. In hotter areas, this tray is usually insulated. In New Zealand, milk deliveries used horses until the 1960s, when trucks largely took over. Horses were still used for delivery into the 1970s in a few small areas. Originally, people paid by leaving money in the bottles, but later, payments were made using tokens, usually bought at a local
dairy. Home milk deliveries died out in the 1990s after the deregulation of the milk industry, where supermarkets and other stores were permitted to sell milk.
Europe , 1956 Milkmen appeared in Britain around 1860, when the first railways allowed fresh milk to arrive in cities from the countryside. By 1880, the milk was delivered in bottles. By 1975, 94% of milk was in glass bottles, but in 1990, supermarkets started offering plastic and carton containers, reducing bottled milk from 94% to 3% by 2016. In the 20th century, milk delivery in urban areas of Europe has been carried out from an electric vehicle called a
milk float. ==Cultural impact==