When you win a restock, the waiting game begins. How quickly a retailer gets the product to your door matters more than most restockers realize. Fast shipping means you can verify the product sooner, list it for resale while demand is still high, and move on to the next opportunity. Slow shipping ties up your capital, delays your ability to flip products, and increases the risk that market prices will drop before you even have the item in hand.
This guide compares shipping speeds across every major retailer that restockers frequent, breaks down the factors that affect delivery times, and provides strategies for getting your purchases as quickly as possible.
Why Shipping Speed Matters for Restockers
Before diving into retailer comparisons, let us quantify why shipping speed should factor into your restocking decisions.
Capital Velocity
The faster you receive, verify, and sell a product, the faster you recoup your investment and reinvest in the next opportunity. If Retailer A delivers in two days and Retailer B delivers in seven days, Retailer A frees up your capital five days sooner. Over dozens of transactions per year, this difference compounds.
Market Price Decay
Resale prices for hyped products typically peak immediately after release and decline over the following weeks as more supply enters the market. Every day of shipping delay is a day of potential price decay. A sneaker that resells for $300 on release day might resell for $260 two weeks later. If your retailer takes ten days to ship, you have already lost $30 to $40 in potential profit before the product arrives.
Buyer Expectations
If you sell on platforms like StockX or GOAT, you have strict shipping deadlines after a sale. StockX gives sellers two business days to ship after a sale is confirmed. If you have not received the product yet when a sale comes through, you cannot fulfill the order and risk penalties or account suspension.
Quality Verification
You cannot verify the condition of a product until it arrives. If there is a manufacturing defect, shipping damage, or an incorrect item, the sooner you discover it, the sooner you can initiate a return or exchange while return windows are still open. For more on returns, see our return policy guide for restockers.
Retailer Shipping Speed Comparison
The following comparison is based on standard shipping options using each retailer’s membership or loyalty program where applicable. Expedited and overnight shipping are covered separately.
Standard Shipping Speeds
| Retailer | Standard Shipping | With Membership | Free Shipping Threshold | Typical Carrier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon | 3-5 business days | 1-2 days (Prime) | $35 (non-Prime) | Amazon Logistics, UPS, USPS |
| Nike | 4-8 business days | 2-5 days (Member) | Free for members | UPS, FedEx |
| Adidas | 5-10 business days | 3-7 days (adiClub) | $50 | FedEx, UPS |
| Best Buy | 5-7 business days | Same | $35 | UPS, USPS |
| Target | 3-5 business days | Same (Drive Up same day) | $35 | USPS, UPS, FedEx |
| Walmart | 3-5 business days | Next day (Walmart+) | $35 | FedEx, USPS, Walmart fleet |
| GameStop | 5-10 business days | 3-5 days (Pro) | $50 | FedEx, USPS |
| Foot Locker | 5-10 business days | 3-7 days (FLX) | $50 | FedEx |
| Newegg | 3-7 business days | 2-3 days (Premier) | $50 | UPS, FedEx |
| Costco | 5-10 business days | N/A | Included with membership | Various |
| B&H Photo | 3-7 business days | N/A | Most items free | Various |
Average Delivery Times (Real-World Data)
Advertised shipping times and real-world delivery times often differ. Based on community reports and testing, here are the typical real-world delivery times for standard shipping to the continental United States:
| Retailer | Advertised | Real-World Average | Best Case | Worst Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon (Prime) | 1-2 days | 1.5 days | Same day | 3 days |
| Amazon (Non-Prime) | 3-5 days | 4 days | 2 days | 7 days |
| Nike (Member) | 2-5 days | 4 days | 2 days | 7 days |
| Best Buy | 5-7 days | 4 days | 2 days | 8 days |
| Target | 3-5 days | 3 days | 2 days | 6 days |
| Walmart (Standard) | 3-5 days | 3.5 days | 2 days | 7 days |
| Walmart+ | Next day | 1.5 days | Same day | 3 days |
| GameStop | 5-10 days | 7 days | 4 days | 14 days |
| Foot Locker | 5-10 days | 6 days | 3 days | 12 days |
| Newegg | 3-7 days | 5 days | 2 days | 9 days |
| Adidas | 5-10 days | 6 days | 3 days | 12 days |
Ranking: Fastest to Slowest
Based on real-world averages:
- Amazon Prime — 1.5 days average
- Walmart+ — 1.5 days average
- Target — 3 days average
- Walmart (Standard) — 3.5 days average
- Amazon (Non-Prime) — 4 days average
- Best Buy — 4 days average
- Nike — 4 days average
- Newegg — 5 days average
- Adidas — 6 days average
- Foot Locker — 6 days average
- GameStop — 7 days average
Factors That Affect Shipping Speed
Several variables influence how quickly your order arrives, and understanding them helps you set realistic expectations.
Warehouse Location
Retailers ship from distribution centers spread across the country. Your proximity to the nearest warehouse directly affects delivery time. Amazon has the densest warehouse network with hundreds of fulfillment centers, which is why Prime delivery is so fast. Smaller retailers with fewer warehouses may need to ship cross-country.
Order Processing Time
Shipping speed and delivery speed are not the same thing. A retailer might offer “2-day shipping” but take 1 to 3 days to process and hand off the package to the carrier. The total delivery time is processing time plus transit time.
| Retailer | Average Processing Time |
|---|---|
| Amazon | Same day to 1 day |
| Nike | 1-3 days |
| Adidas | 2-4 days |
| Best Buy | 1-2 days |
| Target | 1-2 days |
| Walmart | Same day to 1 day |
| GameStop | 2-5 days |
| Foot Locker | 2-4 days |
Processing time is where retailers like GameStop and Foot Locker lose ground. Their products might ship via the same carriers as Amazon, but they take longer to pick, pack, and hand off the package.
Product Type
Some products ship faster than others due to inventory management and packaging requirements:
- Sneakers: Generally ship quickly because they are pre-packaged and easy to handle
- Consoles: May experience delays due to high demand, signature requirements, and larger packaging
- GPUs: Often ship from specialized warehouses with fewer locations
- Clothing: Usually ships quickly from centralized distribution centers
Carrier Selection
The carrier a retailer uses significantly impacts delivery speed and reliability:
| Carrier | Speed | Reliability | Tracking Quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon Logistics | Excellent | Good | Excellent |
| UPS | Good | Excellent | Excellent |
| FedEx | Good | Good | Excellent |
| USPS | Variable | Variable | Good |
| DHL (eCommerce) | Slow | Fair | Fair |
| OnTrac | Variable | Fair | Fair |
| LaserShip | Variable | Fair | Fair |
UPS and FedEx are the most reliable traditional carriers. Amazon Logistics (Amazon’s own delivery network) is fast but has received mixed reviews on package handling. USPS is highly variable depending on your local post office.
Time of Year
Shipping speeds fluctuate throughout the year:
- Holiday season (November to December): All carriers experience delays. Add 1 to 3 days to normal delivery times
- Prime Day (July): Amazon’s network is strained, affecting even non-Amazon shipments carried by Amazon Logistics
- Severe weather events: Storms, floods, and extreme temperatures can delay shipments by days
- Carrier strikes or labor disputes: Rare but can cause significant disruptions
Geographic Location
Your location within the United States affects delivery times:
- Major metro areas (NYC, LA, Chicago, Dallas): Fastest delivery, proximity to multiple warehouses
- Suburban areas: Slightly slower, but still well-served by all carriers
- Rural areas: Significantly slower, fewer delivery options, less frequent carrier routes
- Hawaii and Alaska: Add 5 to 10 days for most retailers, limited carrier options
- US territories: Often treated as international shipping with longer transit times
Strategies for Faster Delivery
Even within a retailer’s standard shipping framework, you can take steps to receive your orders faster.
Leverage Membership Programs
The single biggest improvement you can make is joining retailer membership programs that include expedited shipping:
- Amazon Prime ($139/year): Transforms 3 to 5 day shipping into 1 to 2 day shipping
- Walmart+ ($98/year): Adds next-day delivery on many items
- Nike Membership (free): Provides free shipping and slightly faster processing
- Best Buy TotalTech ($199.99/year): Includes free shipping on all orders
If you spend more than $500 per year at any single retailer, the membership cost is likely worth it for the shipping speed alone, before accounting for other benefits. For a detailed breakdown, see our cashback stacking guide which covers how to maximize value from these memberships.
Choose Pickup Options
Many retailers offer in-store or curbside pickup for online orders, which eliminates shipping time entirely:
| Retailer | Pickup Option | Typical Ready Time |
|---|---|---|
| Best Buy | Store Pickup | 1 hour (if in stock locally) |
| Target | Drive Up / Order Pickup | 2 hours |
| Walmart | Pickup Today | Same day |
| GameStop | Ship to Store | 3-5 days (from warehouse) |
| Nike | In-Store Pickup | Varies by location |
For high-priority restocks where you need the product immediately, store pickup is unbeatable. Check if the product is available at a nearby location before ordering for delivery.
Optimize Your Shipping Address
Simple address optimizations can prevent delivery delays:
- Use your full legal name (prevents carrier verification delays)
- Include apartment or unit numbers in the correct field
- Add delivery instructions (gate codes, building entry information)
- Ensure your zip code is correct (incorrect zip codes can add days of delay)
- Consider a P.O. Box if your home deliveries are unreliable
Pay for Expedited Shipping (When It Makes Sense)
For high-value, time-sensitive purchases, paying for expedited shipping can be worth the cost.
| Shipping Speed | Typical Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 2-Day | $10-$20 | Moderate urgency, valuable items |
| Overnight | $20-$40 | Time-critical flips, avoiding weekend delays |
| Same-Day | $10-$15 (Amazon) | Maximum urgency, metro areas only |
The math is straightforward: if expedited shipping costs $15 but getting the product three days earlier lets you sell at a price $30 higher than the delayed price, the expedited shipping has a positive ROI.
Ship to a Business Address
Carriers prioritize business addresses over residential addresses for many delivery routes. If you have access to a business address (your workplace, a co-working space, a business you own), shipping there can shave a day off delivery time. Business addresses also have fewer “not home” delivery failures.
Tracking Your Shipments
Efficient shipment tracking reduces anxiety and helps you plan your selling timeline.
Recommended Tracking Tools
| Tool | Features | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Shop (by Shopify) | Auto-detects tracking, multiple carriers | Free |
| Parcel | Cross-platform, widget support | Free (basic) |
| 17TRACK | International tracking, 900+ carriers | Free |
| Deliveries | macOS/iOS, clean interface | $4.99 |
| AfterShip | Email notifications, analytics | Free (basic) |
Tracking Best Practices
- Track immediately: Add tracking numbers to your tracking app as soon as they are available
- Set delivery notifications: Enable push notifications for delivery updates
- Monitor for exceptions: Watch for “delivery exception” or “held at facility” statuses that indicate problems
- Document delivery: If possible, have packages delivered where you can see them arrive (security camera, window view) to prevent theft claims
- Keep tracking records: Save tracking information in your restock tracking spreadsheet for reference in case of disputes
Dealing with Shipping Problems
Even with the best retailers and carriers, shipping problems occur. Here is how to handle the most common issues.
Lost Packages
If your tracking shows “delivered” but you did not receive the package:
- Check with neighbors, building management, or household members
- Look in non-obvious delivery locations (behind plants, under mats, in garages)
- Wait 24 hours (some carriers mark packages as delivered before actual delivery)
- Contact the carrier with your tracking number
- File a claim with the retailer if the carrier cannot locate the package
- If the retailer does not resolve it, file a dispute with your credit card company
Damaged Products
If a product arrives damaged:
- Document the damage with photos before disturbing the packaging
- Contact the retailer’s customer service immediately
- Request a replacement or refund
- If the retailer is unresponsive, file a claim with the carrier
- Use your credit card’s purchase protection as a last resort (see our credit card strategy guide for cards with the best protection)
Wrong Item Received
If you receive the wrong product:
- Do not open or use the incorrect item
- Contact the retailer immediately with photos of what you received
- The retailer should send you a prepaid return label and either ship the correct item or issue a refund
- Keep all original packaging until the issue is resolved
Signature Required Deliveries
Some high-value items require a signature upon delivery. If you are not home during delivery hours:
- Redirect the package to a carrier facility for pickup
- Authorize a neighbor or building manager to sign
- Use a carrier-specific service (UPS Access Point, FedEx Hold at Location) to redirect to a nearby pickup point
- Request the retailer to remove the signature requirement (some will for trusted accounts)
International Shipping Considerations
If you restock from international retailers or sell to international buyers, shipping becomes more complex.
Common International Shipping Challenges
| Challenge | Impact | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Customs clearance | 1-5 day delay | Provide accurate customs documentation |
| Import duties | 5-20% of product value | Factor into cost calculations |
| Longer transit times | 7-21 days typically | Use express international shipping |
| Limited tracking | Less visibility | Use carriers with global tracking |
| Return complications | Expensive, slow | Avoid international returns if possible |
When International Shipping Makes Sense
International restocking makes sense when:
- The product is significantly cheaper in another country (after currency conversion and duties)
- The product is not available domestically
- You are selling to international buyers who expect faster fulfillment from a local source
For most domestic restockers, the added complexity and cost of international shipping is not worth the marginal benefit.
Future of Retail Shipping
Shipping is evolving rapidly, and these trends will affect restockers in the coming years.
Same-Day and Sub-Same-Day Delivery
Amazon, Walmart, and Target are expanding same-day delivery to more markets. As same-day delivery becomes the norm, the competitive advantage of fast shipping will shift from days to hours.
Drone Delivery
Amazon Prime Air and other drone delivery services are in limited operation. As regulations expand, drone delivery could provide sub-hour delivery for small packages (sneaker-box-sized items are ideal candidates).
Autonomous Delivery Vehicles
Several companies are testing autonomous delivery vehicles (small sidewalk robots and full-size vans). These could reduce delivery costs and increase delivery speed in urban areas.
Micro-Fulfillment Centers
Retailers are building small fulfillment centers in urban areas to enable faster last-mile delivery. This trend reduces the distance between warehouse and customer, shrinking delivery windows.
FAQ
Is Amazon Prime worth it just for faster restock shipping?
If you make five or more Amazon purchases per year for restocking, Prime pays for itself through faster shipping alone, and that is before factoring in the streaming services and other benefits included with the membership. At $139 per year, you need roughly $700 in annual Amazon restocking purchases (at a 20% margin) for the faster shipping to positively impact your bottom line through quicker flips.
Can I request a specific carrier from a retailer?
Most retailers do not let customers choose their carrier for standard shipping. However, when you select an expedited shipping option, the carrier is usually specified (e.g., “UPS 2-Day” or “FedEx Express”). If you have had consistently bad experiences with a specific carrier, contacting the retailer’s customer service before placing an order to ask about carrier options sometimes works, but it is not guaranteed.
Does shipping speed vary for different product categories at the same retailer?
Yes. Within the same retailer, different products may ship from different warehouses or even different fulfillment partners. For example, a Nike sneaker purchased from Amazon might ship from an Amazon fulfillment center in one day, while a third-party seller’s product on Amazon might take five to seven days. Always check the “Ships from” and “Sold by” information before purchasing.
How do I handle a package that is stuck in transit?
If your tracking has not updated in more than three business days, contact the carrier first with your tracking number. If the carrier cannot provide an update, contact the retailer for a replacement or refund. Most retailers will reship or refund after a package has been in transit for a specified number of days beyond the estimated delivery date (typically 5 to 7 additional days).
Should I factor shipping cost into my restock profit calculations?
Absolutely. Shipping cost (both receiving the product and shipping it to the buyer) is one of the most commonly overlooked expenses in restocking. A product with a $30 gross profit but $15 in total shipping costs has only a $15 actual profit. Always include shipping in both your purchase cost and your selling cost calculations. Your tracking spreadsheet should have dedicated columns for both inbound and outbound shipping costs.


