store in Poland. In self-checkout systems, the
customer is typically required to: • Scan product
barcodes where these exist. • Weigh products (such as fresh produce) without barcodes and select the variety on a
touchscreen display. • Place all scanned items into a "bagging area". The weight observed in the bagging area is verified against previously stored information to ensure that the correct item is bagged, allowing the customer to proceed only if the observed and expected weights match. • Make payment using a
PIN pad or a cash slot. There is normally at least one supervising staff member who will assist customers when required, authorise the sale of age-restricted products such as medicines, alcohol, knives and tobacco, remove or de-sensitize
electronic article surveillance devices, and provide additional
loss prevention and customer service. In 2024, German supermarket chain
Lidl started trials using a
check weigher at some self-checkout terminals.
Scanning while shopping store An alternative system (self-scanning) consists of a portable
barcode scanner that is used by the customer to scan and bag items while shopping. When the customer has finished shopping, the scanner is brought to a checkout
kiosk, where the information from the barcode scanner is downloaded to the kiosk, usually in conjunction with a
customer loyalty card. The customer pays and receives a receipt at the checkout kiosk. The integrity of the system is maintained through the use of random audits or
RFID.
Stop & Shop uses handheld scanners or mobile phone apps for its "ScanIt!" as-you-go system for customers who want to use it. The
Walmart-owned
warehouse club,
Sam's Club, allows customers to download an app and scan items into their cart using a
mobile application. In summer 2018, Walmart China launched its
Wechat-based "Scan and Go" program, allowing customers to scan items into their carts without downloading another mobile app, while paying through Wechat Payment or
Alipay. The "Scan and Go" program carried 30% of all payments made in Chinese stores, and even improved sales in certain markets by 10%. In December 2016, Amazon announced a brick-and-mortar store in
Seattle under the name
Amazon Go, which uses a variety of cameras and sensors in order to see what customers are putting into their shopping bags. The customers scan a
QR code when they enter the store through a companion app, which is linked to their Amazon.com account. When the customer exits the store, the items in their bag are automatically charged to the account.
Hybrid systems Suppliers like ITAB,
NCR,
Wincor-Nixdorf, and others have manufactured hybrid checkout systems that allows the checkout counter to be switched between either a cashier operated mode or a customer self-service mode.
Open-source systems In 2010, the
open-source-self-check project was announced. By using hardware and open source software, this library self-checkout system costs less than one-tenth of the commercial version. A
Java-based open source self-check client for libraries, which has been used at the
University of Oxford, is also available under a GPL v3 license.
RFID-based system Several experimental stores in China use a combination of
RFID and cameras to determine which products a customer has picked. Upon leaving, the customer passes through an RFID-reading gate and only has to pay the bill to check out.
Camera-based systems cashierless store track customers' choices and charge customers automatically via a
mobile app.
Cashierless stores use cameras throughout the entire store. Customers either pay the bill on the way out, or register a smartphone on the way in so they can just walk out with their selected items. As of April 2022, camera-based self-checkout machines are in use at some
baseball stadiums in the United States. Systems manufactured by Caper Counters (acquired by
Instacart) allow customers to put items in a designated area but not align them to expose the barcode. ==Advantages==